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Fuel and the environment ALEX KIRBY Can we live green and prosper? Britain’s energy supplies have struggled to meet demand in the recent freezing weather, prompting fears of serious shortages against a backdrop of cutting carbon emissions. But some believe the development of new technologies could lead to a green industrial revolution if we act fast enough During the winter of 1947, when the Pennine snowdrifts topped five metres, many trains ran late, unreliably and frustratingly full. But the late Roger Lloyd, a canon of Winchester, recalled seeing passengers waiting on a frozen platform and cheering as a grimy freight train got the green light, swung on to the fast line and clattered past them laden with coal to feed the power-station furnaces. Sixty-three years later, the priorities remain the same: heating homes, driving industry and keeping Britain on the move. The ways to achieve those priorities though – assuming we can – have changed drastically. The fossil fuels – oil, gas and, to a degree, coal – are both harder to find and too dirty to use: most scientists and politicians agree we should cut the greenhouse-gas emissions that fossil fuels cause by at least 50 per cent below their 1990 levels by 2050. Many want cuts of 80-90 per cent. At that rate, can we keep the home fires burning? And will we still have an economy with cuts like those? The fairly good news is that the answer to both questions is probably yes – if we have the knowledge and the money to do much of what needs doing. But we need to do it fast – because action in the next decade will be both cheaper and much more effective than leaving it till later. In July 2009 the Climate Group, an international NGO, published a report, “Technology for a Low Carbon Future”. It concluded that 70 per cent of the reductions needed in the next 10 years could be achieved by investing in energy efficiency (in lighting, vehicles, buildings and motors), by using lower-carbon energy sources, and through reducing deforestation. The report says four sectors are crucial to reaching the more demanding 2050 reduction target: power (38 per cent), transport (26 per cent), building (17 per cent) and the remaining 19 per cent from improvements in industry. The cost of necessary improvements in technology between now and 2050 were estimated as the equivalent of 1.4 per cent of GDP – huge, but much of it having to be spent anyway on business-as-usual high-carbon alternatives No country has managed to reduce poverty without increasing its use of energy. Photo: Reuters with no emission reductions to show for them. Improving standards for new buildings and modernising existing ones, for example, could save 1.3 gigatons (Gt) of energy, while reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, would provide nearly 9Gt. That is one strategy which will provide a double benefit. In a normal British winter, about 35,000 more people die than in the comparable summer quarter: in Scandinavia seasonal death rates hardly vary. Andrew Warren, director of the Association for the Conservation of Energy, says: “Six million British households live in fuel poverty, spending 10 per cent or more of their disposable income on keeping warm. Heating and providing hot water for commercial buildings and homes is the single biggest source of greenhouse-gas emissions in the UK, far bigger than transport or industry. We should be ensuring that our buildings keep the heat inside, not letting it escape to warm the birds.” But cutting emissions as deeply as the science indicates will never be easy. Carbon capture and storage (CCS), for example, which involves trapping the carbon dioxide emitted from power-station and factory chimneys and storing it underground, sounds like a good idea. That is just what it is – an idea that has not yet been tested anywhere on a commercial scale. Other imponderables are new generation nuclear power stations and the further expansion of wind power. Even if – a big if – they win public acceptance, they may make only a small contribution to bridging the energy gap. The not really encouraging news is that there is no silver bullet to deliver us from energy shortages. Instead, there are various approaches that can each make a limited but crucial contribution. The obvious ones (if they prove possible) include the clean use of fossil fuels, nuclear power and renewable energy. Others mean using less energy (wearing more jumpers? travelling less?), energy conservation (using one source for several purposes, as in a combined heat and power plant), and biofuels, provided they do not drive out food crops. Many analysts believe we will have to use them all to have any chance of cutting emissions enough. Some years ago the Government’s then chief scientist, Professor Sir David King, was asked about the chances of achieving more modest emissions cuts than we now face. He replied: “It’s do-able. But we’ll have to bust a gut to do it.” Today the gut is ampler, and time is shorter. Suppose we manage it. What then? What should we make of the voices that are saying that meeting the targets will mean forfeiting economic growth? You might expect the Confederation of British Industry to have a view on this. It has. Its director general, Richard Lambert, said a year ago that the global economic crisis was no reason for inaction on climate change. “If the Government can deliver the right framework for investment then UK businesses 6 | THE TABLET | 16 January 2010
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can take the initiative by developing and exploiting new green technologies to improve efficiency and cut costs,” said Mr Lambert. “The sooner that happens, the closer we will be to creating significant numbers of greencollar jobs, building future prosperity for the UK and meeting our climate change targets.” Pat McFadden, the junior Business Minister, went even further, hailing the Government’s climate policies as “an enormous industrial opportunity… a new industrial revolution”. The World Wide Fund for Nature’s 2009 report “Low Carbon Jobs for Europe”, drew the “conservative” conclusion that there were up to 3.4 million green jobs in Europe already, with another five million associated jobs also available. Protecting the economy means more than creating jobs. Producing the same amount of wealth for less energy – improving carbon intensity – is another way. China announced last November that it would set a carbon intensity target for 2020 of a 40-45 per cent reduction relative to 2005. A World Bank study of more than 100 countries the same month said reducing energy intensity was by far the best way of reducing emissions growth. So a cleaner economy should remain a prosperous one. This big picture suggests that with a lot of effort and quite a lot of luck we should manage to reduce emissions to a scientifically safe level, stay warm, and still have an economy worth the name at the end of it. But a couple of other points niggle uncomfortably away. First is the real and unstoppable need of developing countries for cheap energy. There is a strong link between direct access to electricity and per capita income for people living on or below US$2 (£1.25) per day. A quarter of the world’s people have no direct access to electricity, yet no country has managed to increase the rate of poverty eradication substantially without increasing its use of energy, usually electricity. To reach an effective level of electrification has usually taken about 40 to 60 years of continuous incremental investment. That is one reason why global fossil use is likely to rise for decades yet. The US Energy Information Administration said in May 2009: “World marketed energy consumption is projected to grow by 44 per cent over the 2006 to 2030 period … Fossil fuels are expected to continue supplying much of the energy used worldwide … World carbon dioxide emissions are projected to rise from 29.0 billion metric tonnes in 2006 to… 40.4 billion metric tonnes in 2030 – an increase of 39 per cent …” The second worry is about how long we can afford to wait before acting. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says global greenhouse-gas emissions should peak by 2020, and then steadily decline. They are now increasing at about 3 per cent annually. What we decide in this Parliament will affect the global climate for centuries to come. ■ Alex Kirby is a former BBC environment correspondent. ‘My life has changed because I am here. My health has returned and I am happy’ Pany Pan If you met Pany Pan today, you’d see a bright, handsome 15 year-old boy with a real love of life. He lives in a group home in Cambodia run by CAFOD partner Maryknoll Mission, with fourteen other vulnerable children and five carers who the children affectionately call ‘the mothers.’ He loves school and says that every day he feels lucky that he can learn. ‘I was so thin and I had no strength. I was hopeless and waiting to die.’ But just four years ago Pany Pan’s life was very different. When he was 11, Pan found out he was HIV positive. His mother was ill too and sadly she died soon after, quickly followed by his father. Pan went to live with his aunt and her two children. His aunt did her best to look after him but she couldn’t afford to feed him properly, send him to school or buy the medicines he desperately needed. Pan felt all alone. Sadly there are thousands of children like Pan in Cambodia. But thanks to the gifts and legacies of the Catholic community here in England and Wales, Maryknoll is able to provide loving homes, education, care and training to children affected by HIV and AIDS. Now Pan – and many other children like him – has a future he can look forward to. The transforming power of love A gift in your will to CAFOD, however large or small, could help more young people like Pany Pan and save and change lives for generations to come. CAFOD works with more than 500 partners in over 50 countries around the world and legacies fund more than a fifth of our overseas work. Once you have taken care of your loved ones in your will, please could you consider making a gift to CAFOD? It would make a real and lasting difference. For more information without any obligation about leaving a legacy to CAFOD, or for your free copy of CAFOD’s guide to making a will, please call Beth Brook on 020 7095 5525 or write to her at CAFOD, Romero Close, Stockwell Road, London SW9 9TY. You can also email Beth at legacy@cafod.org.uk or visit cafod.org.uk/legacy i e B u n g e r o t h A n n : Ph o t o RXXXXX 27459 Registered charity no. 285776. CAFOD is a member of Caritas International. 16 January 2010 | THE TABLET | 7

Fuel and the environment

ALEX KIRBY

Can we live green and prosper? Britain’s energy supplies have struggled to meet demand in the recent freezing weather, prompting fears of serious shortages against a backdrop of cutting carbon emissions. But some believe the development of new technologies could lead to a green industrial revolution if we act fast enough

During the winter of 1947, when the Pennine snowdrifts topped five metres, many trains ran late, unreliably and frustratingly full. But the late Roger Lloyd, a canon of Winchester, recalled seeing passengers waiting on a frozen platform and cheering as a grimy freight train got the green light, swung on to the fast line and clattered past them laden with coal to feed the power-station furnaces.

Sixty-three years later, the priorities remain the same: heating homes, driving industry and keeping Britain on the move. The ways to achieve those priorities though – assuming we can – have changed drastically. The fossil fuels – oil, gas and, to a degree, coal – are both harder to find and too dirty to use: most scientists and politicians agree we should cut the greenhouse-gas emissions that fossil fuels cause by at least 50 per cent below their 1990 levels by 2050. Many want cuts of 80-90 per cent.

At that rate, can we keep the home fires burning? And will we still have an economy with cuts like those? The fairly good news is that the answer to both questions is probably yes – if we have the knowledge and the money to do much of what needs doing. But we need to do it fast – because action in the next decade will be both cheaper and much more effective than leaving it till later.

In July 2009 the Climate Group, an international NGO, published a report, “Technology for a Low Carbon Future”. It concluded that 70 per cent of the reductions needed in the next 10 years could be achieved by investing in energy efficiency (in lighting, vehicles, buildings and motors), by using lower-carbon energy sources, and through reducing deforestation. The report says four sectors are crucial to reaching the more demanding 2050 reduction target: power (38 per cent), transport (26 per cent), building (17 per cent) and the remaining 19 per cent from improvements in industry. The cost of necessary improvements in technology between now and 2050 were estimated as the equivalent of 1.4 per cent of GDP – huge, but much of it having to be spent anyway on business-as-usual high-carbon alternatives

No country has managed to reduce poverty without increasing its use of energy. Photo: Reuters with no emission reductions to show for them. Improving standards for new buildings and modernising existing ones, for example, could save 1.3 gigatons (Gt) of energy, while reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, would provide nearly 9Gt.

That is one strategy which will provide a double benefit. In a normal British winter, about 35,000 more people die than in the comparable summer quarter: in Scandinavia seasonal death rates hardly vary. Andrew Warren, director of the Association for the Conservation of Energy, says: “Six million British households live in fuel poverty, spending 10 per cent or more of their disposable income on keeping warm. Heating and providing hot water for commercial buildings and homes is the single biggest source of greenhouse-gas emissions in the UK, far bigger than transport or industry. We should be ensuring that our buildings keep the heat inside, not letting it escape to warm the birds.”

But cutting emissions as deeply as the science indicates will never be easy. Carbon capture and storage (CCS), for example, which involves trapping the carbon dioxide emitted from power-station and factory chimneys and storing it underground, sounds like a good idea. That is just what it is – an idea that has not yet been tested anywhere on a commercial scale. Other imponderables are new generation nuclear power stations and the further expansion of wind power. Even if – a big if – they win public acceptance, they may make only a small contribution to bridging the energy gap.

The not really encouraging news is that there is no silver bullet to deliver us from energy shortages. Instead, there are various approaches that can each make a limited but crucial contribution. The obvious ones (if they prove possible) include the clean use of fossil fuels, nuclear power and renewable energy. Others mean using less energy (wearing more jumpers? travelling less?), energy conservation (using one source for several purposes, as in a combined heat and power plant), and biofuels, provided they do not drive out food crops. Many analysts believe we will have to use them all to have any chance of cutting emissions enough.

Some years ago the Government’s then chief scientist, Professor Sir David King, was asked about the chances of achieving more modest emissions cuts than we now face. He replied: “It’s do-able. But we’ll have to bust a gut to do it.” Today the gut is ampler, and time is shorter.

Suppose we manage it. What then? What should we make of the voices that are saying that meeting the targets will mean forfeiting economic growth? You might expect the Confederation of British Industry to have a view on this. It has. Its director general, Richard Lambert, said a year ago that the global economic crisis was no reason for inaction on climate change.

“If the Government can deliver the right framework for investment then UK businesses

6 | THE TABLET | 16 January 2010

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