Countries Burning 50% More Fossil Fuel by 2030, Widening Emission Gaps, Says UNEP Report

1356

According to a Safety4Sea article, the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) issued a report assessing countries’ plans and outlooks for fossil fuel production highlighting a significant production gap.

Key Players Formulating the Report

The report was produced by leading research organizations, including the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), International Institute for Sustainable Development, Overseas Development Institute, CICERO Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research, Climate Analytics, and UNEP, and more than 50 researchers from numerous universities and research organizations contributed to the analysis and review.

What’s in the report?

Michael Lazarus, a lead author on the report and the director of Stockholm Environment Institute’s US Center, highlighted that

“This report shows, for the first time, just how big the disconnect is between Paris temperature goals and countries’ plans and policies for coal, oil, and gas production. It also shares solutions, suggesting ways to help close this gap through domestic policies and international cooperation”.

How credible is the data?

The report in particular, uses publicly available data in order to estimate the difference between what countries are planning and what would be consistent with 1.5°C and 2°C estimates, based on scenarios from the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C.

50% More Fossil Fuels?

In fact, researchers report that

Governments are planning to produce about 50% more fossil fuels by 2030 than would be consistent with limiting warming to 2°C and 120% more than would be consistent with limiting warming to 1.5°C.

It is further added that “countries’ planned fossil fuel production by 2030 will lead to the emission of 39 billion tonnes (gigatonnes) of carbon dioxide (GtCO2), which accounts to 13 GtCO2, or 53%, more than would be consistent with a 2°C pathway, and 21 GtCO2 (120%) more than would be consistent with a 1.5°C pathway,” with the gap estimated to widen significantly by 2040.

Credit: The Production Gap Report 2019

Larger Gaps in Coal, Oil and Gas

In terms of coal, the production gap is larger; by 2030, “countries plan to produce 150% (5.2 billion tonnes) more coal than would be consistent with a 2°C pathway, and 280% (6.4 billion tonnes) more than would be consis- tent with a 1.5°C pathway.”

Also, “oil and gas are also on track to exceed carbon budgets, as countries continue to invest in fossil fuel infrastructure that “locks in” oil and gas use. The effects of this lock-in widen the production gap over time, until countries are producing 43% (36 million barrels per day) more oil and 47% (1,800 billion cubic meters) more gas by 2040 than would be consistent with a 2°C pathway.”

Credit: The Production Gap Report 2019

Emission Reduction Would Be Harder

Notably, the report adds that this overinvestment in coal, oil, and gas supply locks in fossil fuel infrastructure that will make emissions reductions harder to achieve.

It is suggested that the global production gap is even larger than the already-significant global emissions gap, mostly due to minimal policy attention on curbing fossil fuel production, and even though many governments aim to lower their emission levels, they are indicating the opposite when it comes to fossil fuel production; with plans and projections for expansion, hampering the collective ability of countries to meet global climate goals, and further widening both the production and the emissions gap.

Support for Production Is Multifaceted

What is more, governments seem to support production in numerous ways; as they not only play a central role in permitting exploration and production, but they also support the fossil fuel industry through direct investments, research and development funding, tax expenditures, and assumed liability and risk.

The Environment Healthy Policies

Whatsoever, several governments have adopted policies to restrict fossil fuel production in order to further fulfill their climate pledges under the Paris Agreement. “Though most countries focus exclusively on the “demand side” — with policies that aim to boost renewable energy, energy efficiency, and other low-carbon technologies — some governments have also begun to enact “supply-side” measures that aim to limit fossil fuel production,” the report underlines.

Credit: The Production Gap Report 2019

Namely, the governments of Belize, Costa Rica, France, Denmark, and New Zealand have all enacted partial or total bans or moratoria on oil and gas exploration and extraction, while Germany and Spain are phasing out coal extraction.

Critical Findings of the Report

All in all, main findings include that

  • The world is set to produce about 50% more fossil fuels in 2030 than would be consistent with limiting warming to 2°C and 120% more than would be consistent with limiting warming to 1.5°C.
  • The production gap is largest for coal, with countries planning to produce 150% more coal in 2030 than would be consistent with limiting warming to 2°C, and 280% more than would be consistent with limiting warming to 1.5°C.
  • Oil and gas are also estimated to exceed carbon budgets, with continued investment and infrastructure locking in use of these fuels, until countries are producing between 40% and 50% more oil and gas by 2040 than would be consistent with limiting warming to 2°C.
  • National projections suggest that countries are planning on 17% more coal, 10% more oil and 5% more gas production in 2030 than consistent with NDC implementation.

The Overall Scenario

In 2016, and just one day before the Paris Climate Agreement came into force, the UN Environment Programme released its annual Emissions Gap report revealing that the world was still heading for temperature rise of  2.9 to 3.4oC this century. UNEP said that the world must urgently and dramatically increase its ambition to cut roughly a further quarter off predicted 2030 global greenhouse emissions and have any chance of minimizing dangerous climate change.

Specifically, the report found that 2030 emissions were expected to reach 54 to 56 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent – far above the level of 42 needed to have a chance of limiting global warming to 2oC this century. One gigatonne is roughly equivalent to the emissions generated by transport in the European Union (including aviation) over a year.

More recently, in November, the Carbon Tracker Initiative launched a report according to which in order to “deflate” the carbon and protect investors, oil and gas companies have to shrink, meaning that they have to combine their production by more than a third by 2040 to limit emissions, in line with the international climate targets.

Overall, the international climate targets aim to a zero-carbon shipping future and a more green and sustainable environment. The Paris Agreement states that nations have to limit warming to “well below” 2ºC and “pursue efforts” for 1.5ºC. For a 50% chance of success, carbon budgets for 1.5ºC and 1.75ºC, irrespective of the trajectory taken, equate to 13 and 24 years at current CO2 emissions levels.

Did you subscribe to our daily newsletter?

It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe!

Source: Safety4Sea

error: Content is protected !!