Japan’s nuclear power plant crisis

A person, who is believed to be have been contaminated with radiation, in a white bag is carried by soldiers at a radiation treatment centre in Nihonmatsu city in Fukushima prefecture on March 13, 2011. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Matthew Bunn, Harvard University

As bad as it is, Japan’s nuclear accident is dramatically less catastrophic than Chernobyl. That accident spread millions of curies of radioactivity — 3-4 per cent of all radioactivity in the reactor core — around the surrounding countryside, exposing millions of people in several countries.

Large areas are uninhabitable to this day. Here, there is no real prospect of a runaway chain reaction as occurred at Chernobyl. Instead, what has happened is the melting of fuel in reactor cores, leading to the release of a very modest amount of cesium and other fission products. Read more…

Regional movement on the global problem of climate change

Australian Greens senators Christine Milne and leader Bob Brown, independent MP's Rob Oakeshott (right), Tony Windsor (rear left) and climate change minister Greg Combet listen to Prime Minister Julia Gillard during a press conference in Canberra, Thursday, Feb.24, 2011. A carbon price has been agreed in a deal with the greens and independent MPs and will start on July 1 2012. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Peter Drysdale

The political debate in Australia is currently consumed by a furious stoush over climate change policy.

Sensing sufficient support from the independents and Greens, who hold the balance of power over the minority government, Australia’s Prime Minister Julia Gillard has declared battle once more in the off-again, on-again campaign to introduce a national carbon price (this time via the transition of declaring a price on carbon and later moving to an emissions trading scheme). Read more…

Climate change: Where are we at globally now?

Members of environmentalist groups participate in a protest march march in Cancun, Mexico, on 07 December 2010, during the XVI United Nations Climate Change Conference. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Ross Garnaut, ANU and University of Melbourne

Human induced climate change is a global problem and an effective solution requires large mitigation contributions from all major developed and developing countries, and from the rest of the world too.

The search for effective climate change policy is partly a search for effective cooperation amongst countries of a kind and dimension that has never previously been known on a global scale. Read more…

Australia drags, China leads on global action to reduce emissions

Greenpeace activists hang a 100 metre banner from the Sydney Opera House with the message: Stop The Politics, Climate Treaty Now. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Frank Jotzo, ANU

The last two years have seen economic upheaval in the West, and climate change negotiations move along rather different tracks than most anticipated before the 2009 Copenhagen conference.

What are the implications for global climate policy, the Asia Pacific region and Australia? New papers by Australia’s Garnaut Climate Change Review Update released last week attempt to give some answers. Read more…

Climate change policy resurrected in Australia

The Federal Government's climate change adviser Professor Ross Garnaut addresses a public forum in Brisbane, Friday, July 11, 2008. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Frank Jotzo, ANU

Climate change policy is alive again in Australia. Prime Minister Gillard has committed to introduce a carbon price during the current term of government. A Multi-Party Committee on Climate Change is at work, and an update to the Garnaut Review takes a fresh look at some of the tough issues facing the world and Australia in getting good climate policy off the ground.

Getting carbon pricing off the ground may seem a tall order after the attempt of the previous government under Kevin Rudd  to introduce emissions trading failed among a collapsed deal with the opposition (whose leader Malcolm Turnbull was deposed over the issue), considering that the current government’s needs rely on votes by Independents and the Greens to get any legislation through Parliament, and in the context of setbacks in US climate policy and widespread (if largely misplaced) disappointment with the international climate negotiations. Read more…

Australia’s floods and farming

Transport trucks sit in floodwaters in the Brisbane suburb of Rocklea on 14 January 2011. The cost of fresh fruit and vegetables is continuing to rise after floods wiped out important growing regions and food distribution infrastructure in Queensland. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Jeff Bennett, ANU

The 2011 floods in Australia have been remarkable for their intensity and geographic spread. Records for depth, frequency and extent have been broken, all due to a La Niña event only exceeded in recorded history by one in 1917–18.

The impact on agriculture has been similarly record-breaking. From tropical north Queensland to western Victoria and across the Murray Darling Basin in the east and in the Gascoyne region around Carnarvon in the west, a wide variety of farm enterprises have been affected. Read more…

Fixing legal loopholes in Indonesia’s forest and land use governance

This picture shows peat land cleared for an acacia plantation in Kampar, outside Pekanbaru, Riau, Sumatra. In 25 years Riau has lost four million hectares (nearly 10 million acres), or more than 60 per cent its forest. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Fitrian Ardiansyah, ANU

As a country with one of the largest areas of rainforest in the world, it is not surprising that Indonesia is also considered a pioneer in the development of REDD+ (Reducing Emission from Deforestation and Forest Degradation).

In early 2007, the Ministry of Forestry (MoF) formed the Indonesia Forest Climate Alliance (IFCA) with the help of various government departments, donor agencies, research institutions and NGOs to initiate the development of REDD+ policies. Read more…

India: The problems of land acquisition

In this photo taken on February 16, 2010 a construction worker watches a crane during the renovation of the Wankhede cricket stadium in Mumbai. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Bornali Bhandari, NCAER

Looking back at 2010, what is the biggest hurdle in the Indian growth story that occurs in myriad reports and research? The one word answer is ‘land’.

Increased economic growth has only increased the many alternative uses of land, such as for agriculture, industries, infrastructure (roads, railways, power, telecom, mining etc), building houses, malls and other economic activities. Read more…

Climate innovation centres in the developing world

A boy walks past a brick factory on the outskirts of Jammu, India, Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Ambuj Sagar, IIT

The twin climate challenges of mitigation and adaption are two of the defining problems of the 21st century, particularly for developing countries. They come at a time when many of these countries’ economies are growing rapidly, leading to large increases in energy demand. Because many developing countries are situated in areas particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, these problems are particularly serious.

But while these problems are serious, they are by no means insurmountable. They are challenges that can be met, in part, by the development of technology. Read more…

Breakthrough at Cancún

Delegates at the United Nations climate change conference applaud the draft agreements on the final day of the COP16 conference (Photo: Flickr User 'UN Climate Talks')

Author: Peter J. Wood, ANU

The UNFCCC COP16 climate conference has come to a successful conclusion with a series of decisions that are known as the Cancún Agreements. On the morning of the final day, there were tense moments, and it was unclear whether there would be much progress at all. But after the draft texts were circulated, the Mexican Foreign Minister, Patricia Espinosa, convened an ‘informal plenary’ where she said that in these texts, every Party had been listened to, and after two hours for people to examine the texts, the plenary will reconvene. There was then sustained applause and a standing ovation. From that moment on, there was a great sense of hope that there would be a positive outcome.

The main decision results from the work of the Ad-hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action. Read more…

Cancun COP16: A ‘six-pack’ for long-term cooperative action

The Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management of Austria, Nikolaus Berlakovich, speaks during the plenary session of the COP16 United Nations Climate Change conference on December 9, 2010 in Cancun, Mexico. (Photo: AAP)

Author: Peter J. Wood, ANU

In the final days of the COP16/CMP6 Conference, the negotiators at Cancún are currently trying to negotiate a ‘balanced package’ – also known as a ‘six-pack’, which combines progress on mitigation, transparency (measurement, reporting and verification – or MRV), adaptation, finance, technology, and REDD+ (reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation). The Mexicans are extremely determined to get some sort of outcome from the conference – both for the climate and for multilateral negotiations. They so far seem to have been quite confident in the way that they have facilitated the negotiations, and there seems to be much more trust in the Mexicans from the parties than there was for the Danes last year.

What is uncertain is how ‘good’ the decisions will be – in terms of criteria such as ambition (including capacity to ramp up ambition later), efficiency and equity; how detailed the decisions will be; and whether there is sufficient consensus to get a package of decisions at all. Read more…

The EU engaging China on climate change beyond Cancun

Special Representative for Climate Change Negotiations of China's Foreign Ministry, Huang Huikang, speaks during a press conference at the COP16, Cancun, Mexico, 03 December 2010. (Photo: AAP/ EPA/Alex Cruz)

Author: Jonas Parello-Plesner, European Council on Foreign Relations

There are a couple of certainties about Cancun. It will not bring a global deal. The US will try to focus the agenda on a lack of transparency in China’s emissions control efforts — to cover the fact that the US also brings nothing substantial to the table and is stuck in an anachronistic, fuel-guzzling economy and mindset. Chinese negotiators will arrive with their usual arguments, but equipped with better PR techniques for making sure they aren’t seen as the game stopper — the real lesson they took away from Copenhagen. The poorer countries will clamour for more aid for both mitigation and adaption to climate change. The EU’s credibility among other key players will be slightly dented by its current internal skirmishes on moving from 20 per cent to 30 per cent reductions by 2020. At the end of these two weeks in Mexico, those who aspire to a global deal will be directed towards 2011 and South Africa, and few will believe that it can happen there either. Finally, the summit will be a lot warmer than Copenhagen, and the general world temperature will continue to rise, as the scientists keep telling us.

The conclusion is that big global deals are off – at least for the time being. That’s the short, and somewhat depressing, summary. Read more…

China and India: High on octane, low on clean

Indian laborers carry coal to load a truck in Gauhati, India, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010. (Photo: Source - Australian Associated Press)

Author: Amitendu Palit, NUS

Oil, gas and coal are three critical natural resources playing major roles in economic growth. All three are essential for augmenting manufacturing and services outputs and increasing national gross domestic product (GDP). Economic histories of China and India for the last two to three decades underline their increasing reliance on these fossil fuels for sustaining high economic growth. Given their current growth trajectories, which are not only high but also manufacturing and services intensive, there is little possibility of them reducing their dependence on these energy sources.

Both countries are in search of energy-efficient processes. However, achieving energy efficiency is not easy. Read more…

Containing global warming after Copenhagen: Learning-by-doing approaches

A plenary session of the UNFCC COP16 climate talks in Cancun. (Photo: UN Climate Talks)

Author: Peter Sheehan, Victoria University

The COP15 meeting at Copenhagen in December 2009 has been a watershed in international climate negotiations, both in terms of outcomes and of our understanding of the problems involved in reaching agreement. Widely regarded as a failure because no universal, binding agreement to reduce emissions was achieved, it did produce two notable outcomes: a shared commitment to hold peak global warming to less than 2⁰C and the provision by many countries, under the framework of the Copenhagen Accord, of new commitments to reduce future emissions. It also sharpened debate about what type of agreement should be aimed for – top down or bottom up, legally binding or not, and so on.

As observed in the East Asia Forum by Dr Stephen Howes, COP15 collapsed under the weight of inflated expectations. Read more…

Climate change policies in Japan

A protester stands outside the UN Climate Change Conference in Cancun, Mexico, Tuesday Nov. 30 , 2010. (Photo: AP Photo/Israel Leal)

Author: Seiji Ikkatai, Kyoto University

Japan’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the 1990 base year to 2007 have been increasing en route to achieving the 2008-12 Kyoto Protocol target of 6 per cent reduction. Since 1997, when Japan adopted the Protocol, a raft of climate change mitigation policies have been developed to reduce emissions across different sectors. A set of voluntary mechanisms, strongly advocated by the Japanese Federation of Economic Organisations, have been implemented to reduce emissions in the industry sector. For households and offices, the main measures used to reduce emissions have been environmental education and information dissemination. Some regulations have been introduced that can improve energy efficiency, but they cannot influence GHG emission volumes.

Moreover, there are subsidies and tax reductions or exemptions available to assist in replacing old facilities with highly energy-efficient ones, especially among small industries. Read more…