Climate fight needs a better way forward
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Climate fight needs a better way forward

Starting in the 1990s, climate change has become a fixation for politicians and elites in rich countries. It emerged as the world had just seen the end of the Cold War. In the capitals of Europe in particular, it felt like most of the planet’s big problems were fixed, so climate change was the final frontier.

These proponents of climate action advocated with relish the goal of ending reliance on the very fossil fuels that had powered two centuries of astonishing growth. Sure, this would cost hundreds of trillions of dollars, but there would always be more growth. What a naïve, narrow-minded worldview. Geopolitics and economics mean a rapid global transition from fossil fuels is impossible.

As has long been clear for many, the majority of the world never shared this myopic focus on climate change. Despite the immense progress the world has seen, in many countries, life remains a battle against poverty, hunger, and disease. In even more countries, the top priority is to create more jobs and growth.

Leaders from Europe and the United States talk up “net zero” as though it has global support. But this unity is quickly revealed as a mirage. For one thing, the destabilising axis of Russia, Iran and North Korea is not about to support Western efforts to solve climate change. Indeed, according to McKinsey, achieving the net-zero target would require Russian climate policies costing $273 billion (about 9.9 trillion baht) every year — around three times what Russia spent on its military last year. That won’t happen.

The geopolitical challenges run even deeper. China’s growth has relied on burning ever more coal. It is the world’s preeminent greenhouse gas emitter, with the largest increase of any nation last year. Renewable energy made up 40% of China’s primary energy in 1971, reducing to 7% by 2011 as it ramped up coal use. Strong climate action could cost China nearly a trillion dollars annually, hurting its journey toward becoming a rich nation.

The reality is that most of the world — including India and other emerging economies — will continue to focus on becoming richer, often with fossil fuels. Russia and its ilk will ignore the fixation on climate change altogether. And China will make money from selling the West solar panels and electric cars while only modestly curbing its emissions.

As rich countries irresponsibly attempt to export the cost of climate policy to poor countries through carbon adjustment taxes, they will drive a further wedge into an already fractured world.

Meanwhile, despite all the hype, wealthy countries have very little money left for the climate fight. Annual growth per person among rich countries declined from 4% in the 1960s to 2% in the 1990s. It now hovers just above 1%. Many of these countries face pressure to spend more on defence, healthcare and infrastructure.

Yet, across Europe and North America, single-minded zealots who were born into a world of relative calm in the 1990s continue to push for deindustrialisation and immiseration to tackle climate change—including for the world’s emerging economies.

This attempt is doomed to failure, not least because carbon reductions need to be sustained across decades and through shifting majorities. The economics of strong climate action was always deficient—and today, this is blatantly obvious. More politicians are realizing what former UK energy and net-zero secretary Claire Coutinho acknowledged: “You cannot heap costs onto struggling families to meet climate targets.”

Already in Europe, voters are turning on politicians who have argued for less growth and prosperity in the name of climate change. With six to seven election cycles before mid-century, strong climate policies that could cost each person in the rich world more than ten thousand dollars a year are doomed. These policies will make it more likely that voters turn to populist, nationalist leaders who will entirely abandon expensive net-zero targets. Then, climate policy will be in tatters.

The world needs a better way forward. The best solution is not to push people to be worse off by forcing a premature transition from fossil fuels to inadequate green alternatives. Instead, we should ramp up investments in green innovation, eventually driving down the cost of clean energy to be cheaper than fossil fuels. This is much cheaper and will allow everyone, including India and other emerging economies, to want to make the shift.

Rich countries need to wake up and stop haemorrhaging trillions in self-inflicted climate policies that will be followed by few, laughed at by many, and will mainly make China rich. Spending a small fraction of the climate trillions on green innovation would fix climate change. This will allow us to focus the rest of our resources on education, defence, health care and the many other, important challenges in the 21st century.

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