Subscribe

Tag: Copenhagen



23 Dec 09

Patricia Cochran, Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Council

Patricia Cochran, Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Council

Even though Native Peoples have been among the first to feel the effects of climate change, they had little say in lead-up to the recent UN Climate Summit in Copenhagen, say leaders like Patricia Cochran, Chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Council.

Cochran’s charge is contained in a recent article by reporter Terri Hansen in Indian Country Today.

Still, some leaders focused on what they saw as positive developments for Native Peoples coming out of COP15, reports Hansen. Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, chair of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, told Hansen:

“We managed to bring in the recognition of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, an important instrument to ensure the rights and the knowledge of indigenous peoples is respected in all climate mitigation and adaptation processes.”

(Download The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.)

From "Indigenous Peoples' Global Summit on Climate Change

Last April, Native Peoples from around the world met in Anchorage, Alaska, to hold a pre-Copenhagen summit on climate change.

The meeting summit produced a report documenting a Native agenda for dealing with climate change. (Download the report.)


Filed under: All,CO2,Downloads,Intl.,Laws

Trackback Uri






17 Dec 09

Rep. Giffords touring ASU solar array

Rep. Giffords touring ASU solar array this fall

US Representative Gabrielle Giffords, a strong advocate of solar power and sustainable development, is in Copenhagen, along with twenty other members of Congress, for what is sure to be a contentious final negotiation on a climate treaty.

“We need to work with the White House to make sure the United States is not only heard at these crucial talks,” Giffords said in a statement released by her office today, “but lead the way toward an agreement that will maximize the benefits for both our economy and out environment.”

The Solar Roadmap

Giffords sponsored the “Solar Technology Roadmap Act” that recently passed by House by a wide margin. The legislation, which would create a panel to coordinate federal spending on solar research and development, was one of a handful of bills discussed at a Senate hearing last week. (For more on the Roadmap, go here.)

Copenhagen Congressional Delegation

California Democratic Representative George Miller is blogging the meetings. He writes:

Everybody seems to think that the fact that the House of Representatives passed an energy and climate bill has really been a positive force during these international negations and strengthens the United States hand here (I guess Speaker Pelosi was right to push for passage of the legislation earlier this year).

The next briefing, from our technical people, was on how reductions will be made and what the impact will be on our economy and the ways to verify that all countries are playing by the same rules.

The stakes are high for our global environment and for our economy — every country here knows that the countries that get ahead on these issues have the opportunity create real economic and job growth for their economies in this new green economic environment. This is why we are trying to shift to a new energy policy in the U.S., to create jobs at home and send U.S. exports abroad.

Next we will be off to meet with a delegation from India — more later.

Here’s a list of the full Congressional delegation, with each member’s twitter ID. (You can see their twitter feed by hovering over the icon before the name.)

Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi

Majority Leader Steny Hoyer

Rep. George Miller, Chairman, Committee on Education and Labor

Rep. Henry Waxman, Chairman, Committee on Energy and Commerce

Rep. Ed Markey, Chairman, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Charles Rangel, Chairman, Committee on Ways and Means

Rep. Bart Gordon, Chairman, Committee on Science and Technology

Rep. James Sensenbrenner, Ranking Member, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee on Science and Technology

Rep. Sander Levin, Committee on Ways and Means

Rep. Joe Barton, Ranking Member, Committee on Energy and Commerce

Rep. Fred Upton, Committee on Energy and Commerce

Rep. Earl Blumenauer, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Diana DeGette, Committee on Energy and Commerce

Rep. Jay Inslee, Committee on Energy and Commerce Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. John Sullivan, Committee on Energy and Commerce Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Marsha Blackburn, Committee on Energy and Commerce Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Timothy Ryan, Committee on Appropriations: Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development

Rep. G.K. Butterfield, Committee on Energy and Commerce

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Committee on Science and Technology


Filed under: All,CO2,Intl.,Laws,Renewables,Solar,Southwest

Trackback Uri






15 Dec 09

EPIA presserSolar power and climate change

Speaking earlier today at a press conference in Copenhagen, the head of the main European photovoltaic (PV) industry organization made the case for PV as a fundamental solution to climate change.

“The problem is global,” said Adel El Gammal, “and PV can bring a global solution.”

El Gammal, secretary general of the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA) since 2008, pointed to PV’s major pluses. His key points included:

  • Solar energy is massively available.
  • PV can provide distributed electrical generation (as well as centralized).
  • It’s a scalable technology, from a few watts to MWs.
  • PV can ramp up production very quickly
  • It is one of the only technologies that be easily integrated into a dense urban setting.

The potential for solar energy is not just theoretical, he added. In the last year alone, El Gammal said, PV accounted for nearly 20% of all new electrical generation in Europe — some 4.7 GW.

Solar in the “Sunbelt Countries”

SunbeltIn the developing world, El Gammal sees an even larger role for solar PV.

The land between 35°N latitude and 35°S is sometimes referred to as the Sunbelt Countries, for reasons that are obvious after glancing at the map to the right, showing the amount of solar energy falling on the planet.

“Sunbelt countries contain 75% of the world’s population,” said El Gammal, “and are also the fastest growing populations.”

Many of the sunbelt countries have a poor electrical infrastructure — with many as 1.6 billion people living with access to electricity. And where electricity is available it is generated primarily by fossil fuels and at a higher cost than elsewhere.

“PV is a perfect solution to match increasing electrical demand” in sunbelt countries, said El Gammal. It is already competitive with peak load generation and, he added, in two to three years, PV will be competitive with medium load generation.

These projections come from several studies commissioned by the EPIA, primarily the report SET for 2020, published in June of this year. That study takes its name, and its mission from the European Union’s climate and energy policies goals adopted in 2007. These include the so-called 20/20/20 goals:

  • Reduce greenhouse-gas emissions unilaterally by 20% from 1990 levels;
  • Ensure that renewable energy represents a 20% share of total energy use;
  • Reduce overall energy consumption by 20%.

By combining a number of best-case scenarios, the EPIA claims that PV can provide more than half of the EU target for renewable energy, moving from 1% of all electrical generation today to up to 12% by 2020.

A Needed Vision

But is such a rapid shift really possible, or is this just a case of industrial wishful thinking? I put that question to Mark Z. Jacobson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford University, and director of the Atmosphere/Energy Program at the school.

Although Jacobson couldn’t speak to the details of SET for 2020 plan, he told The Phoenix Sun that the report is “the kind of vision needed to solve serious problems we are all facing with respect to climate, air pollution health, and energy security.”

Like El Gammal (who told a reporter today that “We have to change our relationship with energy”), Jacobson does not think half-measures are adequate. “I think we need to transform our energy infrastructure entirely,” he said, “to a combination of large scale renewables, including PV, and this needs to occur over the period of 20-40 years (2030-2050)….PV will play a pivotal role in this transition, so large-scale plans such as this are welcome.”

(Jacobson is no stranger to large-scale plans. He is co-author, with Mark Delucchi, of the recent Scientific American cover story, A Plan to Power 100 Percent of the Planet with Renewables).

Which Energy Future?

El Gammal ended by pointing out what so many seem to miss: that our energy choice has very little to do with technology per se. It’s a question of policy.

“There is no technological issue with PV,” he said. “It is just a matter of political will.”

Which is both bad news and good

Bad, because politics are far more complicated than any technology. Good, because politicians are the servants of public will. That means the choice is ours, as is the responsibility for conveying our determined wishes to our leaders.

Resources

SET Exec SumaryTo download the executive summary of the SET FOR 2020 report, click on the report image. (PDF file.)

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.


Filed under: All,CO2,Downloads,Intl.,Laws,Media,Renewables,Solar

Trackback Uri