sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

Gernot Wagner thinks new climate pledges made in Dubai should be welcomed as another small step forward

Public Policy / opinion
Gernot Wagner thinks new climate pledges made in Dubai should be welcomed as another small step forward
COP28 meeting room

 “#Actionism.” That word greeted arriving passengers at Dubai International Airport, the port of entry for the vast majority of the 100,000 or so climate negotiators, activists, industry lobbyists, and others attending this year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference and the events around it. It flickered from ads in the oddly underused metro connecting the airport directly to the official COP28 venue, and it was displayed on the occasional billboard along the two main “roads” spanning the length of the city, each with at least a dozen lanes. Apparently, the neologism is meant to convey not just action, but “vigorous action to bring about change.”

This attempt to rebrand an everyday word encapsulates COP28, surely one of the most surreal climate summits to date. Between Dubai’s ostentatious fossil-fueled wealth, misguided car-centric city planning, and the fact that COP28 itself was led by a fossil-fuel CEO, it has been much easier than in prior years to be cynical about the whole exercise.

But cynicism will not help us address climate change, and while it was tough to spot amid all the greenwashing, there was some real progress on the ground. Two weeks before the conference, the United Arab Emirates opened the world’s largest single-site solar plant, with two gigawatts of panels spanning 20 square kilometers and powering almost 200,000 energy-hogging UAE homes for 1.32 USc per kilowatt-hour – one of the lowest prices for electricity anywhere delivered at this scale.

Nor is this the only development to applaud. The renewables lobby is celebrating a pledge, supported by 118 governments, to triple global renewable-energy capacity and double the annual rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030. The nuclear industry also has reason to cheer, with 22 governments pledging to triple global nuclear-energy capacity by 2050. Both commitments are good news for the climate. The world needs both renewables and nuclear in order to cut fossil-fuel use quickly. Building low-carbon capacity fast is what matters, more so than whether the COP28 agreement includes the words “phase out” or “phase down.”

Precisely because the world needs to cut fossil-fuel use altogether, it is more difficult to evaluate another pledge made this month to reduce methane (CH4). While carbon dioxide (CO2) is the biggest overall climate culprit, CHwill be responsible for as much as 45% of the planetary warming this decade – even though it doesn’t remain in the atmosphere for nearly as long as CO2.

So it was much more than just well-timed symbolism when the US Environmental Protection Agency announced on December 2, the first Saturday of COP28, that it had finalized a long-awaited rule to cut CHemissions from the oil and gas sector by around 80% over 15 years. That news came with a $1 billion commitment to help smaller countries address the same problem, leading several to join the Global Methane Pledge (launched at COP26 in Glasgow and strengthened at COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh) to cut total CHemissions 30% by 2030. And all this comes on the heels of an EU law that sets tight CH4 leakage standards. In classic EU regulatory fashion, that provision should reach well beyond European borders.

December 2 also brought a major industry announcement. Around 50 of the world’s largest oil and gas firms – including ExxonMobil, Shell, SaudiAramco, and ADNOC (the company led by Sultan al Jaber, the COP28 president) – pledged to all but eliminate their own CH4 emissions. That means addressing both venting and the routine flaring of CH4. Though the latter practice has been banned for two decades in the UAE, it remains a major contributor to the constant haze and air pollution engulfing Dubai. Here’s hoping that “actionism” will finally turn this pledge into reality.

Climate campaigners are understandably questioning the industry’s motives, and emphasizing that such pledges could detract from the need to cut both CHand CO2 emissions from fossil-fuel use, not merely from its production. They can cite comments like one by Occidental Petroleum CEO Vicki Hollub, who told S&P Global’s CERAWeek conference earlier this year that Occidental’s purchase of direct-air-capture technology “gives our industry a license to continue to operate for the 60, 70, 80 years that I think it’s going to be very much needed.” The statement put “moral hazard” on display better than any climate campaigner ever could.

None of that diminishes the real, positive effects that would come from slashing CHemissions this decade (or from scaling up carbon-removal technologies, for that matter). But the question of how useful the COP process has been raises an even broader, almost philosophical one: How should we think about CO2, CH4, or any other emissions reductions that are ostensibly “costless” (or even profitable) from a narrow technical perspective, but that have yet to happen?

After all, oil and gas companies here are committing to stop wasting gas, one of their two main products – and an increasingly important and lucrative one at that. Ideally, it would not take the performative circus of COP to achieve these kinds of agreements. Yet, as the CH4 pledge shows, apparently it does.

The problem is that coordinating pledges across industry players, civil society, and governments to measure, report, verify, and ultimately enforce action via a unified set of standards takes time and effort. It is for good reason that the acronym-laden COP process has turned “MRV” into a verb. The task now will be to MRV(E) – measure, report, verify, and enforce – the pledges on renewables, nuclear, and CH4 coming out of COP28, while also keeping the larger picture in mind.

There are clear hurdles to overcome, even – or perhaps especially – with seemingly costless emissions reductions that industries themselves have an interest in adopting. The key task for international gatherings, as for low-carbon technologies themselves, is to focus on getting costs down, and fast. Judged by that benchmark, COP28 may yet prove to be at least as important a stepping stone in the global clean-energy race as any of the previous UN climate summits.


Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at Columbia Business School. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2023, and published here with permission.

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

10 Comments

Complexity requires energy, and runs into entropy. 

Monitoring is complexity. 

Striving for efficiencies usually means less resilience. 

We have to do whatever we do, within less than a decade. 

We aren't going to. 

 

Up
3

Relax, mammalian life and forests thrived on Earth at CO2 levels more than twice that of the present day. It's been more than thirty years since NASA's Hansen warned the US Congress about climate change yet both world population and world food production today is higher than it has ever been.

Up
1

The power cost is 1.3 CENTS per Kwh , not dollars. wow.

 

Up
1

Doing some back of the envelope sums , over a 25 year life , that would represent a install cost of about 36 cents per watt.We are probably running around $ 1.50 -$ 2.00 per watt here. Obviously scale helps.

Up
0

You are right (of course). I have fixed it in the article for the author.

Up
1

Give us a break. Any climate conference in Dubai with everyone turning up in private jets, (John Kerry has 2) has zero credibility with any voter in a vibrant liberal democracy. The only way their remits can be forced on us is to have them forced on us, in a totally nondemocratic way, probably through a world government, or an international agency way. The way the WHO either got, or tried to get international laws to override democratically decided laws of sovereign countries, a wee while back.

Up
6

the port of entry for the vast majority of the 100,000 or so climate negotiators, activists, industry lobbyists, and others attending

I rest my case. 

Up
0

Did they mention all the call girls and escorts who made massive profits from the conference delegates?

Up
0

Amusingly we have a COP president from the middle east bringing some controversy to the climate science debate.

 

The Cop28 president has claimed there is no science behind calls to phase-out fossil fuels as a way of limiting global heating to 1.5C.

The remarks by Sultan Ahmed al Jaber, the United Arab Emirate’s designated leader of the summit in Dubai, resurfaced on Sunday, sparking a backlash from some experts.

During an online event alongside former Irish president Mary Robinson last month, Mr Jaber insisted a phase-out of oil would not allow sustainable development “unless you want to take the world back into caves”.

The remarks, first reported by The Guardian, rippled through the Dubai summit on Sunday and were met with dismay by some climate scientists and activists.

https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/sultan-al-jaber-cop28-fossil-phase-out-b2457663.html

 

 

 

Up
1

I promise to pay attention when global emissions drop. Until then these COP’s are an expensive talkfest. Heck it has taken 40 years to even have the phrase ‘fossil fuels’ inserted in any final deal text.

Up
1