
But unfortunately, there is no rest ahead for anyone, not if we’re going to cut our greenhouse gas emissions back to levels we haven’t seen in a generation or more.
Several companies are showing exemplary individual leadership. I’ve written before about Interface, the Atlanta-based international carpet manufacturer that has set a zero-waste, zero-emissions goal and is fasting approaching it. General Electric is another example. The company’s carbon-cutting products range from wind turbines to super-efficient light bulbs. GE is investing in smart-grid development. It wants its green-product revenues to grow to $25 billion next year, up from $6 billion only five years ago. It just announced it will invest $1.5 billion yearly in clean-tech research by next year.
The bad news: The 940 cities who have endorsed Kyoto are only a fraction of the 40,000 local governments and nearly 20,000 cities in the United States. At the U.S. chapter of International Council of Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), which runs an important five-step program to help mayors move beyond their photo ops to achieve real emissions reductions, only about 550 cities have signed on to date. Only about half have made it to Step 3 – meaning they’ve inventoried their carbon emissions, set reduction targets and created action plans; only 30 have reached Step 5 to implement their plans and monitor progress. More cities should be taking advantage of ICLEI’s help.
In the corporate world, the most aggressive emissions reduction target advocated by U.S. CAP – a cut of 6.75 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 – is far less aggressive than the caps put forward by the international and scientific communities. China, for example, wants developed economies to cut their emissions more than 36 percent below 1990 by 2020. The European Union has endorsed cuts of 25-40 percent.
At the federal level, the Waxman-Markey bill so far calls for reductions of only 3.26 percent compared to 1990 levels -- less than half the cuts the U.S. CAP has endorsed and only about 10 percent of the cuts advocated by China and the EU.
The International Energy Outlook just released by the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that global carbon emissions will rise 39 percent by 2030 if we continue business as usual.
If Washington and Copenhagen produce climate agreements, they are likely to set the floor, not the ceiling, for sufficient action. Because they are the products of compromise, laws and treaties usually codify the lowest common denominator of commitment among the parties who make them. The lowest common dominator today is not nearly enough.
If we are to do better, cities are key because that’s where most of the world’s population lives. Estimates are that up to 80 percent of the world’s population will live in urban settings by 2030. How cities are designed and constructed – from building efficiency to infrastructure and transportation systems -- will have everything to do with the world’s future energy and climate security.
As for corporations, only they may have the resources and clout to catalyze truly revolutionary changes needed in energy and climate technologies and practices.
The challenge facing corporations is illustrated in part by the national poll taken by Yale and George Mason Universities last fall. Asked who should be doing more to fight climate change, 73 percent of respondents answered corporations, making them the top choice over individuals, the President, Congress or local governments. At the same time, respondents ranked corporations as their least-trusted sources of information about climate change (scientists were first and environmental groups second).
As so many of us have pointed out for so long, companies need not sacrifice profits to exercise revolutionary climate leadership. On the contrary, carbon mitigation with green energy technologies promises to be one of the largest global markets ever. There are big profits to be made in being first to the future. There are big advantages for stockholders, too, when their companies subscribe to the GE model, not the GM model.
Companies may find that significant customer loyalty hinges on their climate commitments. The Yale/George Mason poll found that more than half the respondents had either rewarded or punished companies during the previous year by buying or not buying products, based on the manufacturer’s global warming record.
I don’t want to minimize the importance of national laws and international treaties. They are indispensible components of global climate action. At their best, they create stable long-term policies and markets that encourage the private and public sectors to invest in the skills and physical plants needed to equip the world with green products and technologies. Intelligent public policies spur research and development and help new products survive the “valley of death” – that often fatal stage before a new product becomes viable in the marketplace.
But the keys to our future still are in the hands of cities and CEOs. Their goal should be to excel far beyond carbon caps established by law or treaty, to be first to market and the leaders in their fields. Through our votes and purchasing power, we citizen-consumers must insist that our corporate and government leaders do the right thing. Stockholders should be marching on corporate boardrooms to insist that companies invest in the future.
Those who follow the GM model – short-term profits at the expense of long-term damage to the environment, public welfare and national security – are likely to end up as financially bankrupt tomorrow as they are morally bankrupt today.
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Articles by Bill Becker: Link
Labels: Bill Becker, Business, Climate Change, Environment, Global Warming, PCAP