The Dernogalizer

May 19, 2009

US-China Climate Deal!?!?!

 

US-China

This is pretty groundbreaking!  What a week so far!  And now there is a story in the Guardian that the US and China have been having backdoor climate talks since late 2007, and that China is very serious about striking a deal between the two largest greenhouse gas emitters to reduce emissions.  They think there will be a deal in the fall, just before Copenhagen.  This is huge.  I wrote a column last fall about whats at stake with international negotiations, and what the US has to do.  I still firmly believe that we need to come to Copenhagen with a climate bill, but if the US can strike a meaningful pact with China, this will make both a global treaty and a US climate bill all the more likely to become reality.  The stakes are the same, do or die.  But now we have a game.  Now we’re within striking distance of a global treaty.  We need to pass Waxman-Markey, at least in its current for if we can’t make it stronger which I would of course support.  Entire article is pasted below.  Also, Joe Romm of Climate Progress has a very good inside connection on what parts of the story are true, and where the reporter made mistakes.  The basic premise still stands though: a US-China climate deal is a real possibility before Copenhagen.  Article pasted below.

 

China and US held secret talks on climate change deal

• Negotiations began in final months of Bush administration
• Obama could seal accord on cutting emissions by autumn

A high-powered group of senior Republicans and Democrats led two missions to China in the final months of the Bush administration for secret backchannel negotiations aimed at securing a deal on joint US-Chinese action on climate change, the Guardian has learned.

The initiative, involving John Holdren, now the White House science adviser, and others who went on to positions in Barack Obama’s administration, produced a draft agreement in March, barely two months after the Democrat assumed the presidency.

The memorandum of understanding was not signed, but those involved in opening up the channel of communications believe it could provide the foundation for a US-Chinese accord to battle climate change, which could be reached as early as this autumn.

“My sense is that we are now working towards something in the fall,” said Bill Chandler, director of the energy and climate programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and the driving force behind the talks. “It will be serious. It will be substantive, and it will happen.”

The secret missions suggest that advisers to Obama came to power firmly focused on getting a US-China understanding in the run-up to the crucial UN meeting in Copenhagen this December, which is aimed at sealing a global deal to slash greenhouse gas emissions. In her first policy address the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said she wanted torecast the broad US-China relationship around the central issue of climate change. She also stopped in Beijing on her first foreign tour.

The dialogue also challenges the conventional wisdom that George Bush’s decision to pull America out of the Kyoto climate change treaty had led to paralysis in the administration on global warming, and that China was unwilling to contemplate emissions cuts at a time of rapid economic growth.

“There are these two countries that the world blames for doing nothing, and they have a better story to tell,” said Terry Tamminen, who took part in the talks and is an environmental adviser to the governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger. The nations are the top two polluters on Earth.

The first communications, in the autumn of 2007, were initiated by the Chinese. Xie Zhenhua, the vice-chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s central economic planning body, made the first move by expressing interest in a co-operative effort oncarbon capture and storage and other technologies with the US.

The first face-to-face meeting, held over two days at a luxury hotel at the Great Wall of China in July 2008, got off to a tentative start with Xie falling back on China’s stated policy positions. “It was sort of like pushing a tape recorder,” said Chandler, “[but after a short while] he just cut it off and said we need to get beyond this.”

The two sides began discussing ways to break through the impasse, including the possibility that China would agree to voluntary – but verifiable – reductions of greenhouse gas emissions. China has rejected the possibility of cuts as it sees that as a risk to its continued economic growth, deemed essential to lift millions out of poverty and advance national status.

Taiya Smith, an adviser on China to Bush’s treasury secretary, Hank Paulson, who was at the first of the two sessions, said: “The thing that came out of it that was priceless was the recognition on both sides that what China was doing to [reduce] the effects of climate change were not very well known,” she said. “After these discussions was a real public campaign by the Chinese government to try to make people aware of what they were doing. We started to see the Chinese take a different tone which was that ‘we are active and engaged in trying to solve the problem’.”

During the second trip to China by the Americans, Xie suggested a memorandum of understanding between the two countries on joint action on climate change.

Chandler said he and Holdren drew up a three-point memo which envisaged:

•Using existing technologies to produce a 20% cut in carbon emissionsby 2010.

• Co-operating on new technology including carbon capture and storage and fuel efficiency for cars.

• The US and China signing up to a global climate change deal in Copenhagen.

“We sent it to Xie and he said he agreed,” said Chandler.

The ties were further cemented when Gao Guangsheng, the leading climate official, attended Schwarzenegger’s global meeting on climate in November last year. Obama, who had been elected president two weeks earlier, addressed the gathering by video.

By the time Xie visited the US in March, the state department’s new climate change envoy, Todd Stern, and his deputy, Jonathan Pershing, were also involved in the dialogue. But the trip by Xie did not produce the hoped-for agreement. Both Stern and Holdren declined to comment when asked by the Guardian.

Those involved agree it was premature to expect the Obama administration to enter into a formal agreement so soon in its tenure. Additional members of the US team included Terry Tamminen; Jim Green, adviser to Joe Biden, now the vice-president who then headed the Senate foreign relations committee; Mark Helmke, adviser to Richard Lugar, the ranking Republican on the committee; and Frank Loy, a former state department negotiator on climate. Both Green and Loy have been nominated to jobs in the Obama administration.

Chandler and Smith believe the effort will pay off in a more comprehensive deal between the two governments.  “Xie came to visit the US when the administration was still trying to figure out its standing on climate issues and it was without very much staff,” said Smith. “I don’t see this as a dead issue at all. I think it’s something you would consider still in process.”

Climate Bill Update

I don’t have access to a tv at the moment, but I’d imagine the bill is still being marked up and amended.  On Monday, Waxman told everyone to bring their sleeping bag each day of the week.  Most of this is going to be a waste of time since the Republicans are introducing over 400 amendments to try and drag everything out.  The one notable update I’ve found is an amendment allowing for the creation of a clean energy loan bank, which sounds good.  I think this was Congressman John Dingell’s amendment, although I know that Maryland Congressman Chris Van Hollen has legislation to establish a similar kind of green bank with $10 billion dollars on hand.  Link is here, and also pasted below.

Greenhouse Gas Bill Moves Forward, Slowly

By David Fahrenthold
The debate over a bill to cap U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions is finally moving in a House committee.

But it isn’t moving fast.

Yesterday, the Energy and Commerce began what will likely be a weeklong markup of the “Waxman-Markey” bill. But they didn’t actually mark anything up: the members gave opening statements for more than two hours, then adjourned.

This morning, the members debated and approved one Democratic amendment — which would create an agency to provide loans and loan guarantees to clean-energy companies.

That took nearly two hours. Afterward, Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.) said he worried about the committee’s pace.

“We have over 400 amendments,” said Baron, the committee’s ranking Republican.

**Update 5/19/09**:  Good grief, it’s 11:42 pm and they’re just finishing for the day!  Here’s a bit of a summary

Electric Car Breakthrough

Filed under: energy — Matt Dernoga @ 5:19 pm
Tags: ,

Occasionally it’s nice to see a new invention or breakthrough that brings a clean energy future absent of fossil fuels a little closer.  One of the main obstacles facing electric and plug-in cars today is how much energy a battery can store when it can only be so large to fit in the car.  We’ve been getting better with our battery technology and storage, which I why we should be seeing plug-in hybrids on the market in 1-2 years, and electric cars not too far off.  The breakthrough is an air-fueled battery that can last up to 10 times at long as the conventional batteries we use right now.  This doesn’t only apply to electric cars, but all sorts of electronic devices such as laptops and cell phones.  Right now the development of this technology is only halfway through its 4 year program, but hopefully it will find its way to the market within the next decade.  Excerpts below.

“The new design has the potential to improve the performance of portable electronic products and give a major boost to the renewable energy industry. The batteries will enable a constant electrical output from sources such as wind or solar, which stop generating when the weather changes or night falls.”

“The STAIR (St Andrews Air) cell should be cheaper than today’s rechargeables, too. The new component is made of porous carbon, which is far less expensive than the lithium cobalt oxide it replaces.”

“The oxygen, which will be drawn in through a surface of the battery exposed to air, reacts within the pores of the carbon to discharge the battery. “Not only is this part of the process free, the carbon component is much cheaper than current technology,” says Bruce. He estimates that it will be at least five years before the STAIR cell is commercially available.”

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