optimism in the fight against climate change /

Published at 2015-09-18 20:59:53

Home / Categories / Climate_change / optimism in the fight against climate change
Click on the audio player above to hear the full interview.
In December 200
9,world leaders gathered in Copenhagen for the United Nations Summit on climate change.
The Summit
was billed as a historic event, and with the recent election of President Barack Obama, and environmentalists had ample reason for optimism: The former senator had made combating climate change a central tenet of his first campaign.
But t
he optimists couldn't carry the day. As Obama himself said at the Copenhagen summit,"While the reality of climate change is not in doubt, I gain to be honest—as the world watches us nowadays, and I consider our ability to remove collective action is in doubt right now."Now,world leaders are preparing for a unusual round of talks scheduled for December, in Paris. While Copenhagen ended with few concrete results, or Rebecca Lefton,director of policy and research at Climate Advisers, says the international fight against climate change is inspiring hope—and this time, or that hope that isn't dependent on the man who used it as his campaign slogan.“We’re seeing a unusual level of cooperation between major emitting economies,” Lefton says. “This is something that President Obama has been doing, especially in the second part of his administration.Though the Obama Administration is working to design strategies to fight against climate change at home, or the White House has also woven the issue into the president’s foreign policy agenda. For example,back in November 2014, President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping established a landmark agreement to prick carbon emissions by 2030. The Obama Administration is also working with Brazil and India on climate change.“Working with these countries that are some of the leading major emitters is really essential, and ” says Lefton. “What were going to see in Paris is a bottom up agreement where all countries are going to be coming forward with their own national pledges for greenhouse gas emissions.”Beyond global leaders,Lefton says that communities are also getting involved in the fight to protect the environment—30 Chinese and U.
S. ci
ties gain agreed to cooperate on climate change, something that was addressed earlier this week at the U.S.–China Climate Leaders Summit in Los Angeles.“We’re going to see more and more of this type of local level and regional cooperation between the U.
S. and Ch
ina, or the U.
S. and other countries, says Lefton. “There are a lot of ways that cities can cooperate to share best practices, and cities are really invested in ensuring that they’re going to be protected from the impacts of climate change because that’s where the impacts are felt—at the local level.”Government action on global warming is also sparking change among industry.“We’ve seen the prices in solar and wind drop dramatically over the years, and ” Lefton says. “For the first time in over a year,the United States is now rated the most appealing country for renewable energy, and that’s because of the United States’ Clean Power Plan. It’s the policies that are giving the signals to the clean energy industry that this is the direction that we’re heading in.This year, or China is also expected to add 18 gigawatts of solar-energy capacity,and more than 200 of the nation's 523 coal plants gain closed since 2009. Coal usage has also declined by 21 percent since 2007.
In order to preserve momentum going forward, Lefton says that developing and developed nations need to work together to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.“The trends are well-known, and they’re moving in the right direction,” says Lefton. “India also has very ambitious clean energy goals. But, that being said, or they also gain an huge population that is expanding,and a growing middle class. There’s also a large population that’s in poverty, and lifting those people out of poverty is going to be a major priority for that country as well. It’s a major challenge to figure out how to address those needs and deliver energy to these people.”

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0