Search for any green Service

Find green products from around the world in one place

Why 2021 could be turning point for tackling climate change

Why 2021 could be turning point for tackling climate change

Countries only have only a limited time in which to act if the world is to stave off the worst effects of climate change. Here are five reasons why 2021 could be a crucial year in the fight against global warming.

 

Covid-19 was the big issue of 2020, there is no question about that.

But I’m hoping that, by the end of 2021, the vaccines will have kicked in and we’ll be talking more about climate than the coronavirus.

2021 will certainly be a crunch year for tackling climate change.

Antonio Guterres, the UN Secretary General, told me he thinks it is a “make or break” moment for the issue.

So, in the spirit of New Year’s optimism, here’s why I believe 2021 could confound the doomsters and see a breakthrough in global ambition on climate.

 

1. The crucial climate conference

In November 2021, world leaders will be gathering in Glasgow for the successor to the landmark Paris meeting of 2015.

Paris was important because it was the first time virtually all the nations of the world came together to agree they all needed to help tackle the issue.

The problem was the commitments countries made to cutting carbon emissions back then fell way short of the targets set by the conference.

In Paris, the world agreed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change by trying to limit global temperature increases to 2C above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century. The aim was to keep the rise to 1.5C if at all possible.

 

Source: Getty Images

 

We are way off track. On current plans the world is expected to breach the 1.5C ceiling within 12 years or less and to hit 3C of warming by the end of the century.

Under the terms of the Paris deal, countries promised to come back every five years and raise their carbon-cutting ambitions. That was due to happen in Glasgow in November 2020.

The pandemic put paid to that and the conference was bumped forward to this year.

So, Glasgow 2021 gives us a forum at which those carbon cuts can be ratcheted up.

 

2. Countries are already signing up to deep carbon cuts

And there has already been progress.

The most important announcement on climate change last year came completely out of the blue.

At the UN General Assembly in September, the Chinese President, Xi Jinping, announced that China aimed to go carbon neutral by 2060.

Environmentalists were stunned. Cutting carbon has always been seen as an expensive chore yet here was the most polluting nation on earth – responsible for some 28% of world emissions – making an unconditional commitment to do just that regardless of whether other countries followed its lead.

That was a complete turnaround from past negotiations, when everyone’s fear was that they might end up incurring the cost of decarbonising their own economy, while others did nothing but still enjoyed the climate change fruits of their labour.

 

China is responsible for around 28% of global greenhouse gas emissions Source: Getty Images

 

And China is not alone.

The UK was the first major economy in the world to make a legally binding net zero commitment in June 2019. The European Union followed suit in March 2020.

Since then, Japan and South Korea have joined what the UN estimates is now a total of over 110 countries that have set net zero target for mid-century. Together, they represent more than 65% of global emissions and more than 70% of the world economy, the UN says.

With the election of Joe Biden in the United States, the biggest economy in the world has now re-joined the carbon cutting chorus.

These countries now need to detail how they plan to achieve their lofty new aspirations – that will be a key part of the agenda for Glasgow – but the fact that they are already saying they want to get there is a very significant change.

 

3. Renewables are now the cheapest energy ever

There is a good reason why so many countries are now saying they plan to go net zero: the collapsing cost of renewables is completely changing the calculus of decarbonisation.

In October 2020, the International Energy Agency, an intergovernmental organisation, concluded that the best solar power schemes now offer “the cheapest source of electricity in history”.

Renewables are already often cheaper than fossil fuel power in much of the world when it comes to building new power stations.

 

 

And, if the nations of the world ramp up their investments in wind, solar and batteries in the next few years, prices are likely to fall even further to a point where they are so cheap it will begin to make commercial sense to shut down and replace existing coal and gas power stations.

That is because the cost of renewables follows the logic of all manufacturing – the more you produce, the cheaper it gets. It’s like pushing on an open door – the more you build the cheaper it gets and the cheaper it gets the more you build.

Think what this means: investors won’t need to be bullied by green activists into doing the right thing, they will just follow the money. And governments know that by scaling up renewables in their own economies, they help to accelerate the energy transition globally, by making renewables even cheaper and more competitive everywhere.

 

 

4. Covid changes everything

The coronavirus pandemic has shaken our sense of invulnerability and reminded us that it is possible for our world to be upended in ways we cannot control.

It has also delivered the most significant economic shock since the Great Depression.

In response, governments are stepping forward with stimulus packages designed to reboot their economies.

And the good news is it has rarely – if ever – been cheaper for governments to make these kind of investments. Around the world, interest rates are hovering around zero, or even negative.

 

 

This creates an unprecedented opportunity to – in the now familiar phrase – “build back better”.

The European Union and Joe Biden’s new administration in the US have promised trillions of dollars of green investments to get their economies going and kick-start the process of decarbonisation.

Both are saying they hope other countries will join them – helping drive down the cost of renewables globally. But they are also warning that alongside this carrot, they plan to wield a stick – a tax on imports of countries that emit too much carbon.

The idea is this may help induce carbon-cutting laggards – like Brazil, Russia, Australia and Saudi Arabia – to come onside too.

The bad news is that, according to the UN, developed nations are spending 50% more on sectors linked to fossil fuels than on low-carbon energy.

 

5. Business is going green too

The falling cost of renewable and the growing public pressure for action on climate is also transforming attitudes in business.

There are sound financial reasons for this. Why invest in new oil wells or coal power stations that will become obsolete before they can repay themselves over their 20-30-year life?

Indeed, why carry carbon risk in their portfolios at all?

The logic is already playing out in the markets. This year alone, Tesla’s rocketing share price has made it the world’s most valuable car company.

 

Source: Getty Images

 

Meanwhile, the share price of Exxon – once the world’s most valuable company of any kind – fell so far that it got booted out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average of major US corporations.

At the same time, there is growing momentum behind the movement to get businesses to embed climate risk into their financial decision-making.

The aim is to make it mandatory for businesses and investors to show that their activities and investments are making the necessary steps to transition to a net-zero world.

Seventy central banks are already working to make this happen, and building these requirements into the world’s financial architecture will be a key focus for the Glasgow conference.

It is still all to play for.

So, there is a good reason for hope but it is far from a done deal.

 


 

By Justin Rowlatt
Chief environment correspondent

Source: BBC

REUTERS NEXT The Virtual Summit Rethinking the Future

REUTERS NEXT The Virtual Summit Rethinking the Future

 

REUTERS NEXT kicks off 2021 by gathering global leaders and forward thinkers to reimagine solutions to the challenges the new year brings.

After the extraordinary upheavals of 2020, we will come together to look ahead at opportunities for change and growth, as well as how to deal with the rifts and problems that our world and our societies face.

No country, company or community can tackle the future alone. To build a better world, thinkers and doers must come together to share ideas, collaborate and act.

REUTERS NEXT draws on Reuters global reach to host diverse voices from around the world who will examine topics from different perspectives, bringing their passion, experience and expertise to find new ways forward.

Join the conversation at REUTERS NEXT as we look ahead, together.

 

 

REGISTER NOW FOR FREE

 

 

Global Leaders and Forward Thinkers including:

 

 

 

What is NEXT?

 

Four days of agenda setting discussion

 

Led by Reuters editors, this four-day event has been carefully curated to address the most critical global issues of the day.

 

POLITICS, POLICY AND PROGRESS
  • Trade wars: from tech to oil, drawing today’s battle lines
  • Collective uncertainty: navigating continuity & the post-BREXIT future
  • The world in 2021: the fallout from the U.S. election & the rise of populism

 

ECONOMICS: FINANCING THE RECOVERY
  • How to recover: finding ways out of a global recession
  • Taxes and the evolving consumer: how to unleash spending power
  • The future of innovation: global tech vs regulation

 

A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
  • An inclusive, gree recovery: who will act first?
  • A carbon-neutral future: how to lead the way to net zero
  • Zero waste: global supply chains & the circular economy

 

RADICAL REDESIGN: LIVE, WORK & MOVE
  • The new working world: challenges & opportunities of a distributed workplace
  • See the world or save the world: the future of travel
  • The big if: the reliance on vaccines to create a new normal

 

MEDIA AND FREE SPEECH
  • Freedom of speech vs. regulation: the misinformation battleground
  • Publisher or platform? The evolving role of social media in the digital news ecosystem
  • Press freedom and the rise of authoritarianism

 

 

Why NEXT?

 

Sign up to be a part of the world’s largest movement to tackle change, head on

 

BREAKING NEWS

Gain access to first-hand insights from global leaders and forward thinkers on innovative solutions and opportunities that will define the world in 2021

 

REUTERS EDITORIAL

At a time when trust and accountability matter more than ever, join Reuters journalists to examine the trends, questions and impacts shaping business and society

 

ALL STAKEHOLDERS IN ONE PLACE

Over 25,000 top executives from business, government, international organizations and civil society, as well as leading experts, will come together to network, engage and exchange strategies to navigate these uncertain times

 

IMPACT DRIVEN AGENDA

This is the time to get the bigger picture of how our many challenges and disruptions interconnect to shape our future, whilst asking the difficult questions that will help us to set a new way forward

 

REAL CONNECTIONS IN A DIGITAL CONTEXT

We create the topics, you set the discussion. There are plenty of opportunities to connect, engage and build partnerships with the leaders that are driving meaningful change

 

BEYOND BORDERS OR WALLS

The ONLY forum bringing leaders and individuals from around the globe together, seamlessly connected

 

 

REGISTER NOW FOR FREE

 

 

Who’s NEXT?

 

Global leaders and forward thinkers from across

 

GOVERNMENTS & POLICY MAKERS
FINANCE
TECH
ENERGY
HEALTH
RETAIL
TRAVEL
MANUFACTURING
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
FOOD
MOBILITY

 

 

Taking virtual events to the NEXT step

 

WATCH LIVE

Watch presentations, fireside chats and panel discussions from top industry thought-leaders throughout the day in every time zone

 

DISCUSS

Comment and question in real time. Spark conversations with your fellow attendees and build those relationships with instant chat, video calls and discussion groups

 

QUESTION

Get in-depth answers in real-time with our live Q&A sessions with presentation and panel speakers

 

ON-DEMAND

Missed a session? Catch-up in your own time through our on-demand service for 2 weeks. Imagine Netflix but with the best of global thought leadership

 

PERSONALIZE

Create your own conference agenda and export it to your calendar, so you don’t miss business critical sessions

 

CONNECT

Meet and build relationships with fellow attendees who share the same challenges and interests as you with our Intelligent Networking platform (Financial Services, Energy, Manufacturing, Pharma and more)

 

For more information, please visit Reuters Next

 


 

Source: Reuters Next

Vodafone targets 100 per cent renewables-powered mobile network in 2021

Vodafone targets 100 per cent renewables-powered mobile network in 2021

Vodafone has announced plans to shift its entire European mobile network to run on 100 per cent renewable electricity by no later than July 2021, alongside a new target to help its business customers slash their climate impact over the next decade.

The telecoms giant on Friday said it aimed to operate a “Green Gigabit Net” for its customers across 11 European markets powered only be electricity from wind, solar and hydro sources within 12 months, covering countries including the UK, Ireland, Germany, Spain, Italy and Greece.

Around a third of Vodafone’s network is currently powered by renewables, and Friday’s announcement brings forward Vodafone’s existing target date for a fully-renewables-powered mobile network by three years.

Roughly 80 per cent of the energy used by Vodafone’s fixed and mobile networks will be supplied by renewables via Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) and green electricity tariffs, it explained, with the remained covered by “credible” Renewable Energy Certificates.

Where feasible, the firm added, it will also invest in its own on-site renewable power generation, mostly via solar panels.

Mobile network base stations and data centres account for 95 per cent of Vodafone’s energy consumption, with just one base station using around 78kWh of electricity per day, roughly equivalent to the amount of battery power needed in a Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle to travel around 300 miles, it explained.

“As society rebuilds and recovers from the Covid-19 crisis, we have an opportunity to reshape our future sustainably to ensure that recovery does not come at a cost to the environment,” said Vodafone Group CEO Nick Read. “Our accelerated shift to 100 per cent renewable electricity on our European networks will change the way we power our technology for good – reducing our reliance on fossil fuels, helping our customers manage their resources more effectively and reduce their carbon emissions, while helping to create a healthier planet for everyone.”

In addition, Vodafone has also worked with climate consultancy the Carbon Trust to develop a new cumulative target to cut the equivalent of 350 million tonnes of CO2 from 2020-2030 across its value chain, which it said would largely be delivered through its Internet of Things (IoT) services, including logistics, fleet management, smart metering and manufacturing activities.

Over carbon savings are expected to be made through Vodafone’s healthcare services, cloud hosting and home working, it said, with its IoT services.

Altogether the latest announcements form part of Vodafone’s headline ambitions to halve its environmental impact by 2025, resell or recycle 100 per cent of its network waste, and support the shift to a more circular economy.

In 2020 so far, the company said it had invested €77m in energy efficiency and renewables projects, which had unlocked 186GWh of energy savings.

Carbon Trust chief executive Tom Delay said Vodafone had been working together with the organisation for the best part of a decade to quantify the carbon impact of its products and services.

“There is a growing and important opportunity for the ICT sector to develop and enable new solutions that help drive decarbonisation and this target represents a very high level of ambition for Vodafone to continue to drive this strategy, further developing its IoT and other services, and engaging with its business customers,” he added.

 


 

By Michael Holder

Source: Business Green