Continued use of fossil fuels triggers increasingly permanent damage with regards to climate change. Yet, there is growing acknowledgment that fossil fuels remain hard to displace. What, then, can – or should – be done to address this ‘confronting paradox’? This question was at the heart of the talk by Professor Robert H Socolow of Princeton University, US visited the University of Queensland, Australia in February this year. The talk was attended by people with diverse interests – energy and mining industries, management consulting, academia and others.
The ideas of ‘unburnable’ fossil fuels and of ‘stranded assets’ were two particular highlights of the talk. Socolow argued that despite being supremely attractive, several fossil fuels would need to be left in the ground if the world even remotely attempted to reach any significant climate target. Fossil fuels would therefore, essentially remain ‘unburnable’ – an idea that energy planners, climate scientists as well as policy makers at the international level would have to consider when deciding when, where and which fossil fuels should remain unburnable. Currently, resources (including oil, clathrates, gas excluding clathrates and coal) worth approximately 70,000 GtCO2 are located in the ground. A majority of these resources are identified as unburnable if the world aims to contain global warming to under 3 °C.
Stranded assets include investments such as infrastructure and power plants that are built to capitalise on current fossil fuel reserves, with a ‘business as usual’ mandate. External impositions, including mandatory policy changes focused on limiting climate change, technological innovations and changes in societal expectations of what is ‘acceptable’ will reduce the asset value pre-maturely, thus making them irrelevant and ‘stranded’ over the long-term. The latter has particular significance for investors, risk managers and at a broader level, both developed and emerging economies that continue to ride the ‘fossil fuel wave’.
Yet, focusing on ‘solutions’ alone could be counter-productive for every solution may have its own misgivings and a ‘dark side’. Geo-engineering, technological hegemony and nuclear power, for example, have problems of their own. Finally, while carbon pricing is picking up and more efficient systems for carbon usage are developed, there are compelling reasons to remain optimistic about the future of the planet. At the same time, as the talk highlighted, two fundamental issues remain at the core of the fossil fuel-climate change debate: first, further investigations are needed to ascertain the ‘real’ pace of change that is optimal from both social and techno-economic standpoints, and second, long-term mechanisms that help engage policymakers in this conversation more proactively should be identified and operationalised sooner than later.
This summary article is drawn from:
Fossil fuels and climate change – lessening the damage from the collision. Presentation by Professor Robert H Socolow at The Energy Exchange Series, Customs House, Brisbane, 9 February 2016, available here.
Dr Vigya Sharma is part of the Energy and Poverty Research Group, University of Queensland, Australia.
Stories of clear skies and wildlife conquering urban areas might provide much needed comfort during these uncertain times as the health crisis unfolds. But in Brazil, where climate and environmental issues already lack attention and resources, the pandemic underscores the next crisis.
Solutions to the current COVID-19 crisis need to be aligned to those of the climate crisis for a global transformation towards more sustainability, resilience, equity, and justice. Climate diplomacy has the tools to achieve these objectives simultaneously.
In the central Sahel, states are mobilising to combat the impact of climate change as way of reducing conflict. But to respond suitably to growing insecurity, it is important to look beyond a simplistic equation linking global warming and resource scarcity to outbreaks of violence.
Between food losses and critical shortages, COVID-19 and climate change are testing a food system that critics say has lost its resilience to crises.