Economic growth ‘cannot continue’ if the world is to tackle climate change

25.1.2010   (BBC)

Continuing global economic growth “is not possible” if nations are to tackle
climate change, a report by an environmental think-tank has warned.

The New Economics Foundation (Nef) said “unprecedented and probably impossible”
carbon reductions would be needed to hold temperature rises below 2C (3.6F).

Scientists say exceeding this limit could lead to dangerous global warming.

“We urgently need to change our economy to live within its environmental budget,”
said Nef’s policy director.

Andrew Simms added: “There is no global, environmental central bank to bail us
out if we become ecologically bankrupt.”

None of the existing models or policies could “square the circle” of economic
growth with climate safety, Nef added.

‘No magic bullets’

In the report, Growth Isn’t Possible, the authors looked at the main models for climate change and energy use in
the global economy.



Magic bullets – such as carbon capture and storage, nuclear or even geo-engineering
– are potentially dangerous distractions



Dr Victoria Johnson,

Report’s co-author

They then considered whether economic growth could be maintained while “retaining
a good likelihood” of limiting the global average temperature to within 2C of
pre-industrial levels.

The report concluded that a growth rate of just 3%, the “carbon intensity” of
the global economy would need to fall by 95% by 2050 from 2002 levels. This would
require an average annual reduction of 6.5%.

However, the authors said that the world’s carbon intensity had “flatlined” between
2000 and 2007.

“For each year the target was missed, the necessary improvements would grow higher
still,” they observed.

The findings also suggested that there was no proven technological advance that
would allow “business as usual” to continue.

“Magic bullets – such as carbon capture and storage, nuclear or even geo-engineering
– are potentially dangerous distractions from more human-scale solutions,” said
co-author Victoria Johnson, Nef’s lead researcher for the climate change and energy
programme.

She added that there was growing support for community-scale projects, such as
decentralised energy systems, but support from governments was needed.

“At the moment, magic bullets… are getting much of the funding and political
attention, but are missing the targets,” Dr Johnson said.

“Our research shows that to prevent runaway climate change, this needs to change.”

The report concluded that an economy that respected environmental thresholds,
which include biodiversity and the finite availability of natural resources, would
be better placed to deliver human well-being in the long run.

Tom Clougherty, executive director of the Adam Smith Institute, a free-market
think-thank, said Nef’s report exhibited “a complete lack of understanding of
economics and, indeed, human development”.

“It is precisely this economic growth which will lift the poor out of poverty
and improve the environmental standards that really matter to people – like clean
air and water – in the process, as it has done throughout human history,” he told
BBC News.

“There’s only one good thing I can say for the Nef’s report, and that’s that
it is honest. It’s authors admit that they want us to be poorer and to lead more
restricted lives for the sake of their faddish beliefs.”



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8478770.stm

 
 
 
see also      The New Economics Foundation     http://www.neweconomics.org/
 
The report (3,08 MB) is at     http://www.neweconomics.org/sites/neweconomics.org/files/Growth_Isnt_Possible.pdf
 
 
 
the NEF press release     25.1.2010:
 
 

Economic growth no longer possible for rich countries, says new research

Growth ‘drowns-out’ efficiency gains. Environmental ‘tolerance thresholds’ being
pushed too far making a growing economy and a safe climate incompatible according
to new modelling from nef (the new economics foundation).

As economists and politicians anticipate the publication of official figures
for UK economic growth and the World Economic Forum gathers at Davos, new research
from independent think-tank nef, warns that we should be wary of celebrating rising
GDP.

The report,Growth Isn’t Possible: Why rich nations need a new economic direction“, published today, Monday 25 January 2010, presents evidence that endless economic
growth isn’t possible when faced with the threat of climate change and other critical
environmental boundaries.
In a unique analysis, the authors assessed a combination of the leading models
for climate change and energy use in the global economy. They then asked whether
global economic growth could be maintained, while retaining a good likelihood
of limiting global temperature rise to 2 °C, the agreed political objective of
the European Union and considered the maximum rise to which humanity could adapt
without serious difficulty.  
 
They found that this would require unprecedented and probably impossible reductions
in the carbon intensity of a growing economy. None of the models or variations
looked at could square the circle of global economic growth with climate safety.  
Their analysis shows that:
 
Even at a growth rate of 3% (low for many developing countries), the global economy
would need to reduce its carbon intensity by 71% by 2050 (compared to 2002) or
2.7%t per year. This would mean achieving more than double the yearly average
improvement between 1965 and 2002. But even this would result in a level of carbon
dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere of 500 parts per million (ppm). Whereas the latest
climate science shows that such a level would push temperature rises far passed
the 2 °C threshold.

But even this scenario assumes that there is general, significant political will
and international co-operation to move to low carbon economies, neither of which
was demonstrated at the Copenhagen Climate Change Summit in December 2009. And
in the previous decade the carbon intensity of the economy (i.e. the amount of
carbon needed for every unit of output) showed no improvement and in the first
half of the decade actually headed in the wrong direction, up.
 
Leading NASA climate scientist, James Hansen, recommends a target of 350 ppm
CO2 for avoiding dangerous climate change. According to the new analysis, with
a growth rate of 3%, this requires an unprecedented and likely impossible change
to the carbon intensity of the economy.
 
At a growth rate of 3%, in order to stabilise emissions at 350ppm by 2050, carbon
intensity of the global economy would need to fall by 95% by 2050 (compared to
2002) or 6.3% per year, an almost five-fold increase in the yearly average between
1965 and 2002.


However, between 2000 and 2007, the carbon intensity of the economy effectively
flat-lined. Given this, in order to achieve a 350ppm target, the annual fall in
the carbon intensity of economy would need to improve by more than 200-fold. For
each year that the target was missed, the necessary improvements would grow higher
still.
The report also looks at the practical and theoretical limitations of various
technological developments seen by many politicians as central to tackling climate
change.
Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), although hugely hyped is still largely untested.
Doubts surround the cost, site availability and energy needed to implement CCS.
Where biofuels are concerned, if the UK were to use oilseed rape and corn biofuels
instead of petrol and diesel we would need 36 million hectares of land to grow
it – 650 per cent more than all the arable land in the UK.

Even before considering inevitable additional side-effects, these calculations
suggest that there is no magic technological bullet that will allow us to continue
with business as usual in the face of climate change and other critical resource
thresholds. Instead, the report suggests, we should focus on the policy implications
of extensive new research indicating that high levels of well-being and quality
of life can be achieved in rich countries at much lower levels of consumption.  
With an increasing number of life-supporting environmental services becoming over-burdened,
the report highlights the key task of re-engineering economies to work within
their environmental budget.  
 
Andrew Simms, co-author of the report and nef policy director said, "We tend
to think of growth as natural for economies, forgetting that in nature things
grow only until maturity and then develop in other ways. A world in which everything
grew indefinitely would be strange indeed. A young hamster, for example, doubles
its weight each week between birth and puberty. But if it grew at the same rate
until its first birthday, we’d be looking at a nine billion tonne hamster, which
ate more than a year’s worth of world maize production every day. There are good
reasons why things don’t grow indefinitely. As things are in nature, so sooner
or later, they must be in the economy.
 
"The economic priorities of the rich world are as ridiculous as the impossible
hamster. Endless growth is pushing the planet’s biosphere beyond its safe limits.
The price is seen in compromised world food security, climatic upheaval, economic
instability and threats to social welfare. We urgently need to change our economy
to live within its environmental budget. There is no global, environmental central
bank to bail us out if we become ecologically bankrupt."
 
The reports findings are supported by the recent work of Prof. Kevin Anderson
of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at Manchester University, which
concluded that: "Economic growth in the OECD cannot be reconciled with a 2, 3
or even 4 °C characterisation of dangerous climate change."


"The latest climate science shows that we are already terribly close to being
committed to crossing the 2 °C threshold. This means if there is to be any chance
of avoiding this rise there needs to be a ‘crash’ reduction in greenhouse gases,
specifically CO2,." said Dr Victoria Johnson, co-author of the report and lead
researcher of the climate change and energy programme, "The easiest way to achieve
this is for a rapid phase-in of energy demand reduction in developed nations –
who, on average, are consuming excessively the world’s fossil fuels and other
natural resources. There are historical precedents for rapid reductions in energy
consumption such as the 1970s oil crises and the 2001 Californian electricity
crisis, so we know when there is the political will, rapid change is possible."

"At the same time, we need to make sure the solutions to climate change work
for adaptation to climate change too. Magic bullets such as carbon capture and
storage, nuclear or even geo-engineering are potentially dangerous distractions
from more human-scale solutions. These, like decentralised renewable energy, can
help achieve the emissions cuts necessary and improve society’s ability to adapt
to climate change. There is an emerging movement of these human-scale solutions
but they need government support. At the moment, magic bullets such as biofuels,
nuclear and carbon capture are getting much of the funding and political attention
but missing the target. Our research shows that to prevent runaway climate change
this needs to change.’
 
The report concludes that, in an economy designed to respect environmental thresholds,
it may actually be easier to achieve human well-being, social equality, full employment
and strong public services.
 
nef’s recent report, The Great Transition, outlined how best to organise a economy in which people can flourish, while
also remaining in a dynamic equilibrium with the biosphere

 
and see
 
The Impossible Hamster Club
http://www.impossiblehamster.org/     (Little YouTube video about constant growth …..)