Contacts: Durwood Zaelke zaelke@inece.org,
(202) 498-2457; Katie Fletcher kfletcher@igsd.org, (202) 338-1300
Details to be negotiated next year
Can avoid 100 billion tons of carbon dioxide, 0.5°C of warming
Dubai,
6 November 2015 – The countries of the world agreed today to work together in
2016 to use the Montreal Protocol to eliminate the global warming contribution
from one of the six main greenhouse gases by phasing down refrigerants called
hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs. A long list of details are scheduled to be
negotiated during a series of meetings next year during, both at an extraordinary
Working Group meeting and an extraordinary Meeting of Parties. The Montreal Protocol is the only UN treaty
where all 197 countries of the United Nations participate.
“Many parties including the U.S., Mexico, Canada, island
States, and the 54 countries of the Africa Group wanted to move faster with the
details this week, but Gulf States and India demanded delay on details until
after COP 21 in Paris next month, raising a red flag about their tactics in
Paris,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of
the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development, who participated in
the Dubai negotiations.
Zaelke added, “If there’s a silver
lining to this slow deliberation, it’s that the parties will be able to
implement a strict phase down schedule much faster than usual. The market for
superior substitutes is on the march and will be sweeping up the slow moving
companies.”
“After
seven years of efforts, we have at last agreed to amend the Montreal Protocol
next year to phase down HFCs,” said Jeem Lippwe, Deputy Permanent
Representative of the Federated States of Micronesia to the United Nations, who
led his country’s delegation. “This is a
significant win for the climate system and for the momentum of multilateral
climate cooperation heading into Paris.”
HFCs are increasing 10-15% per year, making them the fastest growing greenhouse
gas in much of the world. They were once thought necessary to replace ozone-depleting substances
like CFCs and HCFCs, which are now being phased out. A study by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory concluded that currently available
alternatives to HFCs performed as well as or better in the hottest climates
such as the Gulf.
Phasing
down HFCs will provide climate mitigation up to 100 billion tons of carbon
dioxide equivalent by 2050 and avoid up to 0.5°C of warming by 2100.
This will be a major contribution to the world’s efforts to keep
temperatures from passing 2°C above pre-Industrial levels, beyond which potentially irreversible
and catastrophic climate impacts are expected.
The world’s temperature has already risen by nearly 1°C.
The
Montreal Protocol is widely considered the world’s best environmental
treaty. It has already phased out nearly
100 chemicals that were damaging the stratospheric ozone layer, while also
providing the most climate mitigation of any treaty, the equivalent of 135
billion tons of carbon dioxide. Its success has avoided $1.8 trillion in health
care costs, according to Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the UN
Environment Programme, in his remarks yesterday at the opening of the
high-level segment of the negotiations.
The
past phase outs of refrigerants also has catalyzed improvements in the energy
efficiency of the air conditioners and other appliances using the refrigerants,
often by 30 to 60%. Improving efficiency
of room air conditioners could save enough energy to avoid building up to 2,500
medium-size power plants by 2050, according to Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory in California.
(There are currently 2,300 coal-fired power plants in the world.) This would avoid the equivalent of up to an additional
100 billion tons of carbon dioxide by 2050, while also saving money
for consumers.
**** To view Jeem Lippwee's full statement, please click here.
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