Efforts to keep global warming below the 2 degrees Celsius
warming threshold will very likely fail, warns environmental research group
Worldwatch Institute. Global coal consumption rose 3 percent from 2012 to 2013,
reaching over 3,800 million tons of oil equivalent in 2013 (mtoe). "If
coal consumption continues to increase and no meaningful binding multilateral
agreements on climate change are made, attempts to combat global climate change
will likely fail," writes Christoph von Friedeburg, a research fellow at the Worldwatch Institute.
Further troubling in 2012, "the average heat content of
coal produced in the United States was about 23.4 megajoules per kilogram
(MJ/kg), down from 29.17 MJ/kg in 2005." The group notes. "This means
that more and more coal needs to be burned to generate the same amount of heat
for a desired electricity output."
China and India, are the primary drivers of increasing coal
consumption. Coal demand in China has almost tripled since 2000, notes the
group, rising from 683.5 mtoe at the turn of the century to 1,933.1 mtoe in
2013—more than half of the global figure. In contrast, the United States has
decreased its coal use, but continues to export coal (and its related pollution)
to other countries. According to an Associated Press analysis published this
summer, in 2012, about 9 percent of worldwide coal exports originated in the
U.S.
The recent climate change talks held in Lima, Peru instead
of committing to emissions limitations that are more meaningful than those
agreed in the deficient Kyoto Protocol or its equally weak Doha amendment,
States merely reiterated their intention not to agree to any commitments. Its
decisions contained a confusing mix of compromises, double-speak, and often
just simple says nothing of any significant meaning. The reality is that some nations
don’t want to take responsibility for action and are ready to give up on an
agreement that will honor what science and existing international law. Rather they
are resigned to adopting a series of face-saving gestures that leave the most
vulnerable people in the world increasingly exposed to the harrowing
consequences of climate change. For some it may already be too late. Low lying
island States, such as the Maldives are already doomed to disappear under the
rising sea tides. Thousands of vulnerable people in countries like the
Philippines have already succumb to storms of increasing intensity. Unless we
act now as many as one hundred million sub-Saharan Africans will die due to the
adverse effects of climate change. Politicians and corporations have benefited
from almost two centuries of over-exploitation of our planet now continue to
obstinately defend these ill-gotten gains, leaving others less powerful to bear
the deadly consequences. It is hard to see how this can be called anything, but
another failure of capitalism.
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