Title: Steve Rayner
1Steve Rayner Gwyn PrinsJames Martin Institute
for Science and Civilization
- THE WRONG TROUSERS
- RADICALLY RETHINKING CLIMATE POLICY
2THE WRONG TROUSERS
3THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
- Negative learning (Oppenheimer) - looking at
consequences of organizing research around wrong
scientific model - Technological lock-in (Arthur David) - looking
at how early adoption decisions constrain
subsequent developments - Wicked problems (Rittel Webber) - recognizing
intractable, multi-attribute problems dangers
of premature closure - Uncomfortable knowledge (Douglas, Ravetz) -
highlighting problem of the social construction
of ignorance arising from institutional
commitments - Clumsy solutions (Shapiro) focusing on creating
conditions for emergent solutions in face of
contradictory certitudes
4CLIMATE POLICY IN THE BEGINNING
- Climate change will never be a major public
policy issue 1986 - Too far in future
- Science too uncertain
- No obvious villain
- Sound diagnosis but wrong conclusion!
- Something for everyone in climate change!
5CLIMATE CHANGE THE EUROPEAN CONTEXT
- 3 decades of the European project (climate as a
handy external threat to all) - Margaret Thatcher as Green Goddess out to get
the miners - Prevalence of precautionary principle (avoid
disaster) - Focus on behavioural change
- 70-90 of UK population sees climate as a
significant problem - 70-90 sees the government as primarily
responsible for action - Recent adoption of Europe-wide 2020 emissions
reduction targets but how realistic are they?
6CLIMATE CHANGE THE US CONTEXT
- 3 decades of decentralization
- George Bush Sr the Whitehouse effect
highlighted (misrepresented) disagreement - Prevalence of proportional principle (benefits
and costs) - Greater faith in technological change
- 60 sees climate as a significant problem
- Only 40 looks to the Federal government to lead
response European failure to understand US
political culture - New optimism about Federal leadership
7GOVERNMENT POLICY CONFLICTS
- Possible cautionary tale re new optimism in USA
- The 3 major UK political parties are falling over
each other to demonstrate their green credentials - UK government has set itself a target of 60
emissions reductions by 2050 - UK is falling well short of meeting its declared
goals - Personal carbon credits and two new runways
emergence of carbon governmentality and moral
posturing who is toughest on profligacy
8BUT AT LEAST EVERYBODY NOW AGREES
- But are they right? Or was Kyoto a case of the
wrong trousers
9THE KYOTO PROTOCOL
- Important symbolic expression of global concern
- But profoundly flawed as instrumental arrangement
for achieving emissions reductions (as distinct
from controls) - Was DOA in White House Clinton-Bush transition
changed climate politics rather than policies - Was Bushs repudiation a case of the bad guy
doing the right thing for the wrong reasons?
10FAILURE OF THE KYOTO APPROACH
- Represents 14 years of negotiation only game
in town - 5 targets for industrialized countries have been
watered down to about 2 in real terms, but are
still falling short - Little realistic assessment of the politics of
ramping up to 80 - Has isolated and demonized the USA
- No viable strategy for engaging India and China
- Created CDM scams such as HFC combustion
- No sign of stimulating fundamental technology
transformation - Primarily addresses emissions mitigation not
climate impacts
11LIFE AFTER KYOTO?
- Currently have important window to think about
the future of climate policy after 2012 - Increasing recognition of Kyoto shortcomings
- Emerging new approaches and initiatives but
could they be derailed? - But what can we learn from the history of the
design of the current climate regime?
12THREE AVAILABLE MODELS
- Stratospheric ozone regime
- Strategic arms reduction treaty
- EPA Acid Rain Program
- The first two are typical products of summitry
13STRATOSPHERIC OZONE REGIME 1985-7
- Reducing emissions of gases from industrial
activity - Convention protocols approach
- Targets and timetables
- Production controls
- Advised by Ozone Trends Panel scientists
- But possible dis-analogies include
- Small number of chemically related gases
- Handful of producers
- Availability of technical alternatives
- Smoking gun Antarctic ozone hole
14ALTERNATIVE LESSONS FROM THE OZONE REGIME
- Initial failure of aerosol protocol at Vienna
led to more rigorous regime simple
self-interest or science advisory processes? - Was Kyoto the necessary analogue of the failed
aerosol protocol or an avoidable distraction? - Kyoto instituted production controls NOT
emissions controls - Cross-national consensus built at
non-governmental levels UNEP, environmental
groups, scientific organizations, firms, etc - BUT Governments had negative reaction asserted
top-down control - Government fingerprints
- Intergovernmental not International Panel on
Climate Change
15STRATEGIC ARMS REDUCTION TREATY 1982-91
- Gore was known primarily as national security
wonk - Problem framed as mutually assured reductions
- Targets and timetables
- Monitoring and compliance (harder for adaptation)
- But possible dis-analogies include
- Focus on single technology nuclear weapons
- Warheads under direct government control
- Only two parties
- No obvious conflict with economic development
goals
16EPA ACID RAIN PROGRAM 1993
- Tradable SO2 allowances
- Offered economic efficiencies
- Required monitoring and compliance
- But possible dis-analogies include
- Response to very specific issue of coal
transportation costs - Initial permit allocation by auction
- Trading in like-for-like gases (SO2) not
divergent baskets - Legally enforceable contracts under one national
authority
17THE THREE MODELS COMBINED TO REINFORCE A NARROW
PROBLEM FRAMING
- Climate change is essentially a problem of
limiting emissions adaptation has been
consistent poor cousin - Emissions mitigation is a global commons problem
requiring consensus among 170 countries too
many cooks! - Climate change is a discrete problem that can be
solved independently of broader development
imperatives - Climate policies should not disrupt economic
assumptions either development (China) or
competitiveness (USA) - Improvements in scientific understanding will
lead to policy consensus underestimates role of
values
18WICKED PROBLEMS
- Identified by Horst Rittel in late 1960s as
characterizing social problems - Contrasted relatively easy challenges of public
health engineering in late 19th early 20th
centuries with late 20th century urban planning - Also compared puzzle-solving in mathematics
natural science with complexities of social
policy - Noted challenges of increasing heterogeneity
value conflicts in modern society
19CHARACTERISTICS OF WICKED PROBLEMS
- Symptoms of deeper problems
- Little room for trial error learning
- Lack a clear set of alternative solutions
- Characterized by contradictory certitudes
- Involve entrenched interests
- Persistent insoluble
- Coping not solving
- Feasibility not optimality
20CLIMATE CHANGE AS A WICKED PROBLEM
- UN FCCC objective is to stabilize atmospheric
greenhouse gas concentrations at a level that
would prevent dangerous anthropogenic
interference with the climate system - No agreement on meaning of dangerous or
interference - Climate change is a symptom rather than a problem
- Product of massively overdetermined energy
industrial system - Industrialized world can protect itself through
adaptation - Richer is safer! California earthquakes and
Florida hurricanes no barrier to migration - Poor in marginal environments will suffer first
more concern with future than present
21SEARCH FOR TRANSCENDENT AUTHORITY
- Idea that science compels agreement on action
- Leads to unattainable expectations of science
(The Platinum Standard) - But, The data never speak they mumble
- Surfeit of science is indeterminate (eg, US NAPAP)
22THE REDUCTIONIST TRAP
- Climate debate is latest manifestation of
long-running clash of world views - Reduces What kind of world do we want? to
climate climate to CO2 and CO2 to just one
number 450ppm - Carbon pricing becomes the silver bullet
23ITS THE DEVELOPMENT PATH STUPID(OH! MIND
THE GAPS!)
24UNCOMFORTABLE KNOWLEDGE
25CONFIDENCE IN MODELING
26ITS STILL THE DEVELOPMENT PATH STUPID
27SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
- Kept off climate policy agenda by US China
- Requires diversified approach by multiple actors
- Emphasises benefits rather than restraints
- Focuses on building resilience rather than
economic efficiency
28NO TECHNOLOGICAL FIX BUT NO FIX WITHOUT TECHNOLOGY
- Assumption behind trading is that new energy
technologies will become more competitive as
fossil prices rise but where will new
technologies come from? - Reverse global collapse of energy RD funding
10 countries fund 95 of RD, (new UK government
investments) - Create conditions for accelerated capital
turnover in energy - Focus on energy modernization benefits health
economic - rather than fossil fuel limitation
(China EU) - Consider benefits of international competition as
well as cooperation and coercion (EU and USA) - Expand technological options including
geo-engineering the next taboo for climate
puritans Branson initiatives recognize lack of
options for aircraft
29ZEN AND THE ART OF CARBON CYCLE MAINTENANCE
(Rayner Malone 1997)
- Emphasized importance of learning to manage under
conditions of ignorance and unpredictability - Suggested that diversified strategies would be
necessary to alter overdetermination of energy
and industrial systems - Specifically
- Design policy instruments for real world
conditions rather than make world conform to
idealized model (a global carbon market) - Incorporate climate thinking into routine
decision processes (now called mainstreaming) - Take a regional and local approach to climate
policy making and implementation (emerging
bottom-up initiatives) - Use a pluralistic approach to decision making
(most policy thinking still focuses on national
governments) - Direct resources to protect the most vulnerable
(adaptation still resisted)
30LIFTING THE TABOO ON ADAPTATION (Pielke, Prins,
Rayner Sarewitz 2007)
- Unacceptable topic for many years
- Vulnerability to climate impacts are increasing
for reasons unrelated to greenhouse gas emissions - Present arrangements under Kyoto frame adaptation
expenditures as costs of failed mitigation - Rich countries can avoid paying costs of
adaptation in poor countries by enhanced
mitigation efforts - Available level of MAFs are desultory
- Adaptation in developed countries could be part
of public mobilization strategy
31TIME TO DITCH KYOTO (Prins Rayner 2007)
- Clumsy solution using silver buckshot
- Abandon universalism and focus mitigation efforts
on the big emitters (Gleneagles Climate Process) - Allow genuine emissions markets to evolve from
the bottom up - Make wartime levels of public investment in
energy technology RDD - 80bn/year for USA - Increase investments in adaptation comparable
to mitigation efforts - Work the problem at the appropriate scales
provinces, states, cities - Confront the object and draw nigh obliquely
Montreal Protocol has had more impact on climate
than fully implemented Kyoto
32RAISING CARBOBN COSTS VERSUS LOWERING TECHNOLOGY
COSTS
33CONCLUSIONS
- Significant opportunities are opening up for a
more diversified approach - Essential to learn the lessons of premature
closure - Science cannot cut through Gordian policy knots
- Carbon trading is probably part of the solution,
but will likely be through bottom-up linking of
national/regional systems - A diversified strategy is desirable to find
leverage points to change complex overdetermined
energy/industrial systems - Significant new investment in energy and other
technologies is required - A new emphasis on adaptation and geo-engineering
is essential
34THE ALTERNATIVE