The 2014 UN climate summit begins in Lima, Peru, on Monday next week. It is a potentially crucial conference with next year’s deadline for a new climate treaty fast approaching.
The Peru-based summit takes place in the context of the recent important US-China climate agreement. Understandably, there has been considerable emphasis in recent months placed upon the emerging strategic partnership between Beijing and Washington to tackle global warming.
However, important as this could ultimately prove to be, it is Europe’s relationship with China that may be as important to the prospects of securing a new global climate treaty next year. Fundamentally, both major powers share a vision of a prosperous, energy-secure future in a stable climate and their cooperation on this agenda could help enable a comprehensive, ambitious global warming deal.
The question is whether current political leaders have the vision to develop and grasp the massive opportunity. If they do, the prize will not just be acceleration of the transition to a global low carbon economy, but also bolstering economic growth in Europe and China at a time of continued international uncertainty.
China’s planned investment in the green economy is staggering. For example, investments are already planned of more than £200 billion in renewable energy and £380 billion in “smart grids,” not to mention the £170 billion committed to tackle China’s chronic air pollution.
European companies are well positioned as leaders in much of this area. For instance, as the UK renews its own energy infrastructure, the opportunities for collaboration are enormous.
However, a potential risk is Europe — a key architect of the Kyoto Protocol — could be losing ground in the fight against climate change. To be sure, EU heads of state on Oct. 23 signed a deal which proposes a 40 percent greenhouse gas cut by 2030 compared with 1990 levels. In addition, they also agreed to 27 percent targets for renewable energy market share and energy efficiency gains. The former is binding only on Europe as a whole, while the latter is optional.
However, numerous parties have highlighted that, welcome as these commitments are, they may not be ambitious enough. This is reflected in the fact that some leading countries, including Britain and Germany, are willing to go even further than the 40 percent figure.
The critics here are not just the “obvious suspects” like environmental groups. For instance, the European Trade Union Confederation has asserted that the EU targets are too low to reap the full economic benefits, including new jobs, of a clean energy economy.
Meanwhile, China’s 12th Five-Year Plan is the clearest signal yet to Europe about Beijing’s intent on the climate, clean air and energy agendas. The plan sets a strategic direction for China’s economy and underlines that there appears to be added determination to change the country’s development model from low-grade labor-intensive manufacturing toward a greater emphasis on services and innovation.
Europe has clear strengths in areas that China — now the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases — needs here. As the latter continues on a trajectory to become the world’s largest economy, there are thus substantial commercial opportunities for European firms.
The Five-Year Plan includes policies and measures designed to help China achieve up to a 40 to 45 percent reduction in the carbon intensity of GDP from 2005 levels by 2020. While this is a mammoth ambition that may not be fully realized, it is expected to be underpinned as a political commitment in Beijing’s first national climate change law.
The fact China is using the experience of its sub-national pilot emissions trading schemes to inform development of a national scheme is another signal to Europe. It shows that Beijing is open and willing to learn from Europe’s extensive experience in this area and adapt its models for China’s domestic circumstances.
Importantly, an enhanced bilateral relationship will not necessarily just be one-way traffic; it is increasingly possible that technology transfer could be two-way. For instance, China is already the world’s largest manufacturer and user of solar panels and the largest investor in renewable energy.
To be clear, there is still a significant way to go before China has a fully fledged carbon market or both parties develop new low carbon standards in key industrial sectors, but the potential direction of travel is clear: cooperation could build low carbon industries in a range of sectors as well as align Europe more closely to the world’s future largest economy.
While both powers have much to gain from a deeper partnership on this agenda, the window of opportunity may not remain open indefinitely. Now is the time to intensify collaboration to bolster growth and enhance prospects of a global climate agreement next year.
John Prescott previously served as British deputy prime minister and was Europe’s chief negotiator at the Kyoto climate talks in 1997. Andrew Hammond is an associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics and a former UK government special adviser.
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