A tweet from the
IEA on December 9, 2015 says that ‘without addressing the energy sector, we
have zero chance of reaching our climate change goals”. In fact, with ignoring
three big elephants we already have a zero chance! And people in COP21 are
playing the three monkeys!
The elephants are:
·
International
Marine Bunkers
·
International
Aviation Bunkers
·
Military
Energy Use (Abroad)
Aviation and
maritime bunker fuels are not included
in national emissions totals, hence excluded from emission reduction
commitments.
Emissions from aviation and marine bunkers were
respectively 90% and 64% higher in 2013 than in 1990. In 2013, they represented
3.4% of the world’s CO2 emissions, according to the IEA. In absolute values, CO2 emissions
from Int’l aviation and marine bunkers were 1099 Mt in 2013, equivalent to
those of the African continent!
2015 Edition
of the IEA’s
CO2 EMISSIONS FROM FUEL COMBUSTION says” It is interesting to note that despite efforts
to limit emissions from international transport, emissions from marine and
aviation bunkers, 64% and 90% higher in 2013 than in 1990 respectively, grew
even faster than those from road.” (Page 11). It will surely grow fast also in
the future.
In the latest COP21 draft climate agreement int’l
aviation and shipping emissions do not appear.
According to a Reuters article: Officials from
Europe, which has pushed particularly hard for a reference to the sectors, said
they hadn't given up. "I don't know who got it out but we are fighting for
it to be put back in," EU Energy and Climate Commissioner Miguel Arias
Canete told Reuters. He said not having shipping and aviation in the new text
was a "a step backwards".
Armed forces are large contributor to global
greenhouse gases emissions
Let’s go back
again to the IEA’s book on CO2 emissions statistics. It says: “The IEA has
found that in practice most countries consider information on military
consumption as confidential and therefore either combine it with other
information or do not include it at all.” (Page 21).
I don’t know
all the militaries but what I know is that the US military emissions abroad are
exempt from national reporting requirements under U.S. law and the U.N.
Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Many other people, except perhaps for those in COP21,
know that too.
In
per capita bases, the US military is the largest emitter of Greenhouse Gases
Note: The data
refers to 2012. OECD US military. OECD GHG emissions are from https://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=AIR_GHG . The DOD GHG emissions are
taken from the US DOE Comprehensive Annual Energy and Water Use Reports at http://ctsedwweb.ee.doe.gov/Annual/Default.aspx?ReturnUrl=%2fAnnual%2fReport%2fReport.aspx. The US military manpower
(active duty and civilians) are taken from DMDC https://www.dmdc.osd.mil/appj/dwp/dwp_reports.jsp (sept 2012)
Most people will tell you that the US military energy consumption is only a tiny part of the overall US energy consumption. True, but in absolute values. In per capita bases? See the chart below, which compares the DOD GHG emissions with OECD countries, and tell me!
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