For the past two weeks, negotiators from across the globe
have convened in Paris for the 21st United Nations conference on
climate change. One hundred eighty six countries have come with ambitious
pledges to limit greenhouse gas emissions. While past conferences have
attempted to negotiate a treaty that would keep warming to 2 degrees Celsius, over 100 countries have now pushed to try and keep warming to 1.5 degrees.
It is unclear if this goal is possible given the amount of
carbon we have already added to the atmosphere and the voluntary pledges being
offered so far. Our current path including these pledges sets us up for 5
degrees, and we have already passed the 1 degree mark. Meeting a goal of only
half a degree more of warming would require an unprecedented shift to a decarbonized
economy across the world and would also require removing large amounts of
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Because of the urgency, the final treaty
will likely have specific requirements to “ratchet up” the promises from each
country. The goal is that by the year 2030, all countries would be on a common
pace to revise these promises every five years.
Much of the focus at the conference has been on lowering the
demand for fossil fuel and using technology to limit emissions while switching
to renewable energy. This directly ignores the scientific consensus that 80% of
known fossil fuel reserves must say in the ground for us to remain below 2
degrees of warming. Keeping it in the ground is not being discussed at this
point, and here at home, the United States promotes and subsidizes fossil fuel
development while trying to limit carbon emissions – a very difficult task.
In Paris, and here at home, you will hear two major topics
of discussion when it comes to climate change: mitigation and adaptation. Mitigation includes activities that will
reduce or prevent greenhouse gas emissions, such as switching to renewable
energy or preventing deforestation. Adaptation
includes activities that reduce harm from the effects of climate change, such
as removing infrastructure from flood prone areas, planting trees and treating
stormwater.
Much of Save The Bay’s work in habitat restoration falls under
adaptation. We are restoring salt
marshes so that they provide habitat value for as long as they can be
sustained. We are supporting dam removal as a way to connect rivers so that
fish can migrate. We are helping cities and towns to move flooded infrastructure
and treat stormwater. We also support mitigation
by using solar panels at the Bay Center and advocating for renewable energy. On
Tuesday, the RI Governor signed an executive order that will direct state
agencies to get 100% of their energy use from renewable sources by 2025. It
also supports zero emission vehicles, public transit and green buildings.
There is a third piece of the puzzle, however, and that
deals with loss and damage.
The problem, of course, is that no matter what we do in the
coming years, some amount of sea level rise and temperature rise are already “baked
in” and this will bring significant loss and damage to everyone on the planet
to varying degrees. Already, Pacific Island nations are faced with abandoning
areas that are uninhabitable, and droughts and floods are forcing people off
their land.
This loss and damage is a bone of contention at the talks
because poor countries feel that wealthy developed nations should shoulder the
burden for making payments to them as restitution for causing much of the
problem. Beyond money, assistance would include providing these countries with
the capacity to cope and welcoming refugees from climate change disaster zones.
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