Monthly Archives: March 2016

Hinkley C ‘secret documents’ may have to be disclosed

An 18-month battle to discover the true cost to consumers of building the Hinkley Point C nuclear reactors is to come to a climax in London.

The Information Commissioner has been blocking freedom of information requests to publish subsidy documents held by the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

However, it has finally agreed to an oral hearing on the issue before the Information Tribunal.

The decision comes just before EDF’s chief executive in Britain, Vincent de Rivaz, faces a grilling from MPs about the £18bn cost of Hinkley, which is underwritten through subsidies and customer bills.

EDF is yet to make a final decision on whether to go ahead with the project and MPs have said there are “serious questions” to answer about Hinkley’s viability.

Thomas Piquemal, EDF’s finance director quit two weeks ago over concerns about Hinkley’s impact on the already heavily indebted company. However, David Cameron and François Hollande have strongly backed the project as “a pillar of the bilateral relationship” and “a key aspect of Britain’s energy policy”.

The government has agreed to pay £92.50 a megawatt hour for Hinkley’s electricity in 2012 pounds, index-linked to the Consumer Price Index. That was about double the wholesale price when the deal was reached but now represents almost three times the wholesale power price due to rises in the CPI and power price declines.

Today’s school leavers will be paying for HPC until they draw their pensions

Greenpeace and Request Initiative, a Freedom of Information Act specialist, has been trying since 2014 to obtain the contents of seven documents that are understood to contain further details about the subsidies for Hinkley.

They were submitted to the European Commission as justification for the need to provide state aid, which is generally against competition rules.

Greenpeace said it was extraordinary that the Information Commissioner had been supporting DECC’s wish to keep vital information away from the public. The environmental group now hopes progress can be made at an Information Tribunal hearing expected to take place in London in May.

Doug Parr, policy director at Greenpeace, said: “Bizarrely, the Information Commissioner and DECC are hell bent on keeping the evidence showing Hinkley is a good idea for Britain a secret. The reports we have been trying to see for 18 months illustrate the assumptions that DECC used to decide that Hinkley is the best bet to power Britain in the future.

“We think it’s hard to think of any reason it should be kept secret unless the evidence shows that Hinkley isn’t such a good idea. The argument it has to remain a secret because it would damage the government’s negotiations is now over because the negotiations have finished.

“Today’s school leavers will be paying for Hinkley until they’re about to draw their pensions. The government should tell future generations what they are paying for and why.”

Commissioner: ‘commercial secrecy trumps public interest’

The information in the documents was largely prepared for ministers by advisers such as KPMG, Poyry and Oxera, with modelling work and scenario planning by DECC itself.

The preliminary view of the bureaucrats in Brussels was that the measures constituted unlawful financial support, but the final decision reversed this and gave the UK government the green light.

Greenpeace asked for access to the documents and then launched a Freedom of Information request for them to be handed over, which was opposed by DECC.

The Information Commissioner initially agreed to withhold the documents on the grounds that “the reports contain and discuss matters of a sensitive commercial nature and the information was provided to DECC in the expectation that it would be treated as confidential”.

It also accepted that the disclosure of the information would “disadvantage the government in the context of future negotiations with other (nuclear plant) developers”.

The Commissioner said there is a strong public interest in disclosing the contents of the documents. but said this was overridden by the other considerations around commercial sensitivity.

But despite this, it has accepted that an oral hearing is “appropriate” in this case. The Information Commissioner said he had no further comments to make ahead of the hearing but DECC justified its commitment to keeping the documents under wraps.

DECC: ‘commercial sensitivity’

A spokesperson for the department said: “The decision to withhold these documents is due to commercial sensitivity in accordance with exceptions set out in the Environmental Information Regulations.

“The Information Commissioner supported this decision and we appreciate that this is now is the subject of a live appeal and we can’t comment any further whilst the appeal process is ongoing.”

EDF itself has always argued that it is totally committed to transparency, saying this would separate the nuclear industry from the secrecy that characterised it in the past.

Last September de Rivaz said: “At EDF Energy, transparency is at the heart of everything we do. It is our responsibility, as the custodians of Britain’s nuclear fleet, to be transparent, open and receptive to questions.

“We are approaching the Final Investment Decision for our new nuclear project Hinkley Point C. As we do, scrutiny has naturally increased. Just as we embrace transparency, we welcome scrutiny. We relish challenge based on facts.”

With two legal challenges agains the Hinkley C subsidy package proceeding, the importance of the so far secret documents cannot be overstated.

If it turns out that they contain significant errors of fact or argument, based on which the Commission decided that the HPC subsidy package was legal, then this would assist the litigants greatly in making their claim that the Commission’s approval was legally invalid.

 


 

Terry Macalister is Energy Editor at the Guardian. He tweets @TerryMac999.

This article was originally published on the Guardian and is republished here with thanks via the Guardian Environment Network. This version includes some additional reporting by The Ecologist.

 

Hinkley C ‘secret documents’ may have to be disclosed

An 18-month battle to discover the true cost to consumers of building the Hinkley Point C nuclear reactors is to come to a climax in London.

The Information Commissioner has been blocking freedom of information requests to publish subsidy documents held by the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

However, it has finally agreed to an oral hearing on the issue before the Information Tribunal.

The decision comes just before EDF’s chief executive in Britain, Vincent de Rivaz, faces a grilling from MPs about the £18bn cost of Hinkley, which is underwritten through subsidies and customer bills.

EDF is yet to make a final decision on whether to go ahead with the project and MPs have said there are “serious questions” to answer about Hinkley’s viability.

Thomas Piquemal, EDF’s finance director quit two weeks ago over concerns about Hinkley’s impact on the already heavily indebted company. However, David Cameron and François Hollande have strongly backed the project as “a pillar of the bilateral relationship” and “a key aspect of Britain’s energy policy”.

The government has agreed to pay £92.50 a megawatt hour for Hinkley’s electricity in 2012 pounds, index-linked to the Consumer Price Index. That was about double the wholesale price when the deal was reached but now represents almost three times the wholesale power price due to rises in the CPI and power price declines.

Today’s school leavers will be paying for HPC until they draw their pensions

Greenpeace and Request Initiative, a Freedom of Information Act specialist, has been trying since 2014 to obtain the contents of seven documents that are understood to contain further details about the subsidies for Hinkley.

They were submitted to the European Commission as justification for the need to provide state aid, which is generally against competition rules.

Greenpeace said it was extraordinary that the Information Commissioner had been supporting DECC’s wish to keep vital information away from the public. The environmental group now hopes progress can be made at an Information Tribunal hearing expected to take place in London in May.

Doug Parr, policy director at Greenpeace, said: “Bizarrely, the Information Commissioner and DECC are hell bent on keeping the evidence showing Hinkley is a good idea for Britain a secret. The reports we have been trying to see for 18 months illustrate the assumptions that DECC used to decide that Hinkley is the best bet to power Britain in the future.

“We think it’s hard to think of any reason it should be kept secret unless the evidence shows that Hinkley isn’t such a good idea. The argument it has to remain a secret because it would damage the government’s negotiations is now over because the negotiations have finished.

“Today’s school leavers will be paying for Hinkley until they’re about to draw their pensions. The government should tell future generations what they are paying for and why.”

Commissioner: ‘commercial secrecy trumps public interest’

The information in the documents was largely prepared for ministers by advisers such as KPMG, Poyry and Oxera, with modelling work and scenario planning by DECC itself.

The preliminary view of the bureaucrats in Brussels was that the measures constituted unlawful financial support, but the final decision reversed this and gave the UK government the green light.

Greenpeace asked for access to the documents and then launched a Freedom of Information request for them to be handed over, which was opposed by DECC.

The Information Commissioner initially agreed to withhold the documents on the grounds that “the reports contain and discuss matters of a sensitive commercial nature and the information was provided to DECC in the expectation that it would be treated as confidential”.

It also accepted that the disclosure of the information would “disadvantage the government in the context of future negotiations with other (nuclear plant) developers”.

The Commissioner said there is a strong public interest in disclosing the contents of the documents. but said this was overridden by the other considerations around commercial sensitivity.

But despite this, it has accepted that an oral hearing is “appropriate” in this case. The Information Commissioner said he had no further comments to make ahead of the hearing but DECC justified its commitment to keeping the documents under wraps.

DECC: ‘commercial sensitivity’

A spokesperson for the department said: “The decision to withhold these documents is due to commercial sensitivity in accordance with exceptions set out in the Environmental Information Regulations.

“The Information Commissioner supported this decision and we appreciate that this is now is the subject of a live appeal and we can’t comment any further whilst the appeal process is ongoing.”

EDF itself has always argued that it is totally committed to transparency, saying this would separate the nuclear industry from the secrecy that characterised it in the past.

Last September de Rivaz said: “At EDF Energy, transparency is at the heart of everything we do. It is our responsibility, as the custodians of Britain’s nuclear fleet, to be transparent, open and receptive to questions.

“We are approaching the Final Investment Decision for our new nuclear project Hinkley Point C. As we do, scrutiny has naturally increased. Just as we embrace transparency, we welcome scrutiny. We relish challenge based on facts.”

With two legal challenges agains the Hinkley C subsidy package proceeding, the importance of the so far secret documents cannot be overstated.

If it turns out that they contain significant errors of fact or argument, based on which the Commission decided that the HPC subsidy package was legal, then this would assist the litigants greatly in making their claim that the Commission’s approval was legally invalid.

 


 

Terry Macalister is Energy Editor at the Guardian. He tweets @TerryMac999.

This article was originally published on the Guardian and is republished here with thanks via the Guardian Environment Network. This version includes some additional reporting by The Ecologist.

 

Hinkley C ‘secret documents’ may have to be disclosed

An 18-month battle to discover the true cost to consumers of building the Hinkley Point C nuclear reactors is to come to a climax in London.

The Information Commissioner has been blocking freedom of information requests to publish subsidy documents held by the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

However, it has finally agreed to an oral hearing on the issue before the Information Tribunal.

The decision comes just before EDF’s chief executive in Britain, Vincent de Rivaz, faces a grilling from MPs about the £18bn cost of Hinkley, which is underwritten through subsidies and customer bills.

EDF is yet to make a final decision on whether to go ahead with the project and MPs have said there are “serious questions” to answer about Hinkley’s viability.

Thomas Piquemal, EDF’s finance director quit two weeks ago over concerns about Hinkley’s impact on the already heavily indebted company. However, David Cameron and François Hollande have strongly backed the project as “a pillar of the bilateral relationship” and “a key aspect of Britain’s energy policy”.

The government has agreed to pay £92.50 a megawatt hour for Hinkley’s electricity in 2012 pounds, index-linked to the Consumer Price Index. That was about double the wholesale price when the deal was reached but now represents almost three times the wholesale power price due to rises in the CPI and power price declines.

Today’s school leavers will be paying for HPC until they draw their pensions

Greenpeace and Request Initiative, a Freedom of Information Act specialist, has been trying since 2014 to obtain the contents of seven documents that are understood to contain further details about the subsidies for Hinkley.

They were submitted to the European Commission as justification for the need to provide state aid, which is generally against competition rules.

Greenpeace said it was extraordinary that the Information Commissioner had been supporting DECC’s wish to keep vital information away from the public. The environmental group now hopes progress can be made at an Information Tribunal hearing expected to take place in London in May.

Doug Parr, policy director at Greenpeace, said: “Bizarrely, the Information Commissioner and DECC are hell bent on keeping the evidence showing Hinkley is a good idea for Britain a secret. The reports we have been trying to see for 18 months illustrate the assumptions that DECC used to decide that Hinkley is the best bet to power Britain in the future.

“We think it’s hard to think of any reason it should be kept secret unless the evidence shows that Hinkley isn’t such a good idea. The argument it has to remain a secret because it would damage the government’s negotiations is now over because the negotiations have finished.

“Today’s school leavers will be paying for Hinkley until they’re about to draw their pensions. The government should tell future generations what they are paying for and why.”

Commissioner: ‘commercial secrecy trumps public interest’

The information in the documents was largely prepared for ministers by advisers such as KPMG, Poyry and Oxera, with modelling work and scenario planning by DECC itself.

The preliminary view of the bureaucrats in Brussels was that the measures constituted unlawful financial support, but the final decision reversed this and gave the UK government the green light.

Greenpeace asked for access to the documents and then launched a Freedom of Information request for them to be handed over, which was opposed by DECC.

The Information Commissioner initially agreed to withhold the documents on the grounds that “the reports contain and discuss matters of a sensitive commercial nature and the information was provided to DECC in the expectation that it would be treated as confidential”.

It also accepted that the disclosure of the information would “disadvantage the government in the context of future negotiations with other (nuclear plant) developers”.

The Commissioner said there is a strong public interest in disclosing the contents of the documents. but said this was overridden by the other considerations around commercial sensitivity.

But despite this, it has accepted that an oral hearing is “appropriate” in this case. The Information Commissioner said he had no further comments to make ahead of the hearing but DECC justified its commitment to keeping the documents under wraps.

DECC: ‘commercial sensitivity’

A spokesperson for the department said: “The decision to withhold these documents is due to commercial sensitivity in accordance with exceptions set out in the Environmental Information Regulations.

“The Information Commissioner supported this decision and we appreciate that this is now is the subject of a live appeal and we can’t comment any further whilst the appeal process is ongoing.”

EDF itself has always argued that it is totally committed to transparency, saying this would separate the nuclear industry from the secrecy that characterised it in the past.

Last September de Rivaz said: “At EDF Energy, transparency is at the heart of everything we do. It is our responsibility, as the custodians of Britain’s nuclear fleet, to be transparent, open and receptive to questions.

“We are approaching the Final Investment Decision for our new nuclear project Hinkley Point C. As we do, scrutiny has naturally increased. Just as we embrace transparency, we welcome scrutiny. We relish challenge based on facts.”

With two legal challenges agains the Hinkley C subsidy package proceeding, the importance of the so far secret documents cannot be overstated.

If it turns out that they contain significant errors of fact or argument, based on which the Commission decided that the HPC subsidy package was legal, then this would assist the litigants greatly in making their claim that the Commission’s approval was legally invalid.

 


 

Terry Macalister is Energy Editor at the Guardian. He tweets @TerryMac999.

This article was originally published on the Guardian and is republished here with thanks via the Guardian Environment Network. This version includes some additional reporting by The Ecologist.

 

Hinkley C ‘secret documents’ may have to be disclosed

An 18-month battle to discover the true cost to consumers of building the Hinkley Point C nuclear reactors is to come to a climax in London.

The Information Commissioner has been blocking freedom of information requests to publish subsidy documents held by the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

However, it has finally agreed to an oral hearing on the issue before the Information Tribunal.

The decision comes just before EDF’s chief executive in Britain, Vincent de Rivaz, faces a grilling from MPs about the £18bn cost of Hinkley, which is underwritten through subsidies and customer bills.

EDF is yet to make a final decision on whether to go ahead with the project and MPs have said there are “serious questions” to answer about Hinkley’s viability.

Thomas Piquemal, EDF’s finance director quit two weeks ago over concerns about Hinkley’s impact on the already heavily indebted company. However, David Cameron and François Hollande have strongly backed the project as “a pillar of the bilateral relationship” and “a key aspect of Britain’s energy policy”.

The government has agreed to pay £92.50 a megawatt hour for Hinkley’s electricity in 2012 pounds, index-linked to the Consumer Price Index. That was about double the wholesale price when the deal was reached but now represents almost three times the wholesale power price due to rises in the CPI and power price declines.

Today’s school leavers will be paying for HPC until they draw their pensions

Greenpeace and Request Initiative, a Freedom of Information Act specialist, has been trying since 2014 to obtain the contents of seven documents that are understood to contain further details about the subsidies for Hinkley.

They were submitted to the European Commission as justification for the need to provide state aid, which is generally against competition rules.

Greenpeace said it was extraordinary that the Information Commissioner had been supporting DECC’s wish to keep vital information away from the public. The environmental group now hopes progress can be made at an Information Tribunal hearing expected to take place in London in May.

Doug Parr, policy director at Greenpeace, said: “Bizarrely, the Information Commissioner and DECC are hell bent on keeping the evidence showing Hinkley is a good idea for Britain a secret. The reports we have been trying to see for 18 months illustrate the assumptions that DECC used to decide that Hinkley is the best bet to power Britain in the future.

“We think it’s hard to think of any reason it should be kept secret unless the evidence shows that Hinkley isn’t such a good idea. The argument it has to remain a secret because it would damage the government’s negotiations is now over because the negotiations have finished.

“Today’s school leavers will be paying for Hinkley until they’re about to draw their pensions. The government should tell future generations what they are paying for and why.”

Commissioner: ‘commercial secrecy trumps public interest’

The information in the documents was largely prepared for ministers by advisers such as KPMG, Poyry and Oxera, with modelling work and scenario planning by DECC itself.

The preliminary view of the bureaucrats in Brussels was that the measures constituted unlawful financial support, but the final decision reversed this and gave the UK government the green light.

Greenpeace asked for access to the documents and then launched a Freedom of Information request for them to be handed over, which was opposed by DECC.

The Information Commissioner initially agreed to withhold the documents on the grounds that “the reports contain and discuss matters of a sensitive commercial nature and the information was provided to DECC in the expectation that it would be treated as confidential”.

It also accepted that the disclosure of the information would “disadvantage the government in the context of future negotiations with other (nuclear plant) developers”.

The Commissioner said there is a strong public interest in disclosing the contents of the documents. but said this was overridden by the other considerations around commercial sensitivity.

But despite this, it has accepted that an oral hearing is “appropriate” in this case. The Information Commissioner said he had no further comments to make ahead of the hearing but DECC justified its commitment to keeping the documents under wraps.

DECC: ‘commercial sensitivity’

A spokesperson for the department said: “The decision to withhold these documents is due to commercial sensitivity in accordance with exceptions set out in the Environmental Information Regulations.

“The Information Commissioner supported this decision and we appreciate that this is now is the subject of a live appeal and we can’t comment any further whilst the appeal process is ongoing.”

EDF itself has always argued that it is totally committed to transparency, saying this would separate the nuclear industry from the secrecy that characterised it in the past.

Last September de Rivaz said: “At EDF Energy, transparency is at the heart of everything we do. It is our responsibility, as the custodians of Britain’s nuclear fleet, to be transparent, open and receptive to questions.

“We are approaching the Final Investment Decision for our new nuclear project Hinkley Point C. As we do, scrutiny has naturally increased. Just as we embrace transparency, we welcome scrutiny. We relish challenge based on facts.”

With two legal challenges agains the Hinkley C subsidy package proceeding, the importance of the so far secret documents cannot be overstated.

If it turns out that they contain significant errors of fact or argument, based on which the Commission decided that the HPC subsidy package was legal, then this would assist the litigants greatly in making their claim that the Commission’s approval was legally invalid.

 


 

Terry Macalister is Energy Editor at the Guardian. He tweets @TerryMac999.

This article was originally published on the Guardian and is republished here with thanks via the Guardian Environment Network. This version includes some additional reporting by The Ecologist.

 

Labour needs a new policy on Hinkley C and nuclear power

The resignation of Electricite de France’s Chief Financial Officer Thomas Piquemal – after opposing the announcement next month of an investment decision on the building of a new nuclear reactor at Hinkley Point C in the UK – is the latest in a long line of expert denunciations of this project.

The Labour Party has always supported this project. It has been championed by the British government since the days of Tony Blair, despite expert criticism over the years.

The mystery is not just why the Conservative Party stubbornly remains so wedded to it, but why the Labour Party does too. It should distance itself and come up with a new strategy – and below I outline why.

Hinkley C would be the first new nuclear power station to be built in the UK in two decades. Originally planned for completion in 2017, it is now unlikely to be built until at least 2025 – if ever.

Bloomberg quoted sources close to EDF as observing that the finance officer was forced to quit because he believed that proceeding with construction would be disastrous for the company, while the French and British governments are putting pressure on EDF to proceed anyway. EDF is 85% owned by the French state.

The French company is at the heart of electricity generation in Britain and been the most committed supporter of new nuclear build here.

If EDF and the French and British governments do announce next month that construction will proceed, it will be at a massive cost to the British taxpayer (see below for how much).

The British government faces serious questions as to why it is persisting with Hinkley C. To understand the seriousness of these questions we need to look at the history of Britain’s enthusiasm for this particular plant and technology.

The proposal

NNB GenCo, a subsidiary created by EDF Energy to build and operate two new nuclear power stations at Hinkley Point C and Sizewell, proposes to build a twin reactor power station at Hinkley Point C using an EDF / Areva UK European Pressurised Water Reactor (EPR) design.

Each of the EPR reactors would generate 1600MW of electricity, enough to power about five million homes together. Regulatory and planning hurdles were surmounted in 2013, and yet the project still has not been given the go-ahead. Hinckley Point B was supposed to come to the end of its life cycle this year, but is likely to be extended for another four years.

In 2010, Hinkley Point was one of eight sites identified by the Government for new nuclear power stations. This followed a new enthusiasm by Tony Blair’s Labour government for new nuclear power following almost two decades of disinterest in the subject following the Chernobyl disaster. Commentators at the time credited Tony Blair’s conversion to lobbying by the nuclear industry using the argument that nuclear power could help to fight global warming.

David Kennedy, the watchdog Climate Change Commission’s chief executive, went on to talk of the country’s carbon emission reduction target of a 90% cut in power sector emissions being delivered by 40GW of new nuclear, wind and clean coal and gas power – equivalent to 25 large power stations.

At the same time, the government put its faith in carbon capture and storage (CCS), technology. CCS from the start was condemned by environmentalists as being too expensive to work and was also dubbed a white elephant. It was finally abandoned late last year by the Chancellor George Osborne when he withdrew £1 billion of public support for this technology.

In July of the following year EDF received permission from West Somerset district council to carry out new preparatory groundwork for Hinckley C, and the company lent its support to the local Bridgwater College’s new Energy Skills Centre in order to develop the skills necessary to build the power station.

The government received surprising support from a group of environmentalists led by Mark Lynas and George Monbiot, who broke ranks to back nuclear power. This shocked many other environmentalists such as Jonathan Porritt and Jeremy Leggett. But even these supporters later came out and said that the Hinkley C deal with EDF was a disaster for the taxpayer and should be scrapped.

Targeting women

In 2012 EDF began a publicity campaign in the UK to soften up the public, which was predominantly anti-nuclear, including paying for editorial in women’s magazines because its market research found that women were more like to oppose nuclear power than men.

A complaint I made to the Advertising Standards Authority was upheld, about the use of advertising from EDF that was not labelled as advertising and looked like editorial, in Marie Claire, the “magazine for women who want to think smart and look amazing”. The articles were provided by EDF, under the headline “Nuclear power: the facts” but contained inaccuracies.

Even after the ASA ruled in my favour, EDF still continued making dubious claims in the pages of the magazine, such as that in the 2030s “nuclear reactors in Somerset and Suffolk could supply around 40% of the country’s energy needs”.

In its dreams, maybe. because even while this was going on the French National Audit Office had recommended abandonment of the EPR as too complex and expensive. As Tom Burke, founder director of E3G, commentedat the time: “The French National Audit Office recently recommended dropping the EPR as too expensive. This repeated a recommendation made to (French President) Sarkozy two years ago by the former head of EDF, Francois Roussely, who saw no future for it.”

So: as long ago as 2010 the French government was told by EDF’s own chief that they shouldn’t go ahead with Hinkley C.

“The decision to extend the life of EDF’s existing fleet of reactors in France will put huge pressure on its capital budget over the next decade”, the NAO went on to say, and it could support no further expenditure on its balance sheets. This budget, to repair existing nuclear power stations, is now estimated at 50 billion euros, and that work clearly takes precedence over new build.

Six years after Roussely, Piquemal came to the same conclusion, and realised that EDF could not afford to build Hinkley C and repair its old reactors. Now he’s gone too.

Anyway, back then, heedless of this 2012 report, British Prime Minister David Cameron made an agreement with the then French President Nicolas Sarkozy to boost nuclear co-operation, which Charles Secrett, co-founder of The Robertsbridge Group and ex-leader of Friends of the Earth labelled “a massive rip-off for the the British taxpayer”. In that letter, he and many other environmentalists warned the government that “EDF will have us over a barrel”.

Last month Cameron made the same commitment he made to President Sarkozy to his successor, Françoise Hollande.

Centrica jumps ship

Originally, Centrica, owner of British Gas, was part of a consortium with EDF and Areva to build the plant, but in 2013 it pulled out, citing “uncertainty about overall costs and the construction schedule”. Centrica wrote off £200 million and launched a share buy-back scheme to return another £500 million of unused capital to its investors.

Other energy companies such as RWE and E.ON had already decided not to get involved with new nuclear build. At the time the MP Martin Horwood, said, “like any sane investor in my view, Centrica has decided that it is not going to touch these new nuclear plans with a bargepole”.

The British Government would have been wise to heed this comment, but instead continued to persist, opening negotiations with China over financing of Hinkley C which handed the 20% stake formally taken by Centrica to the state-owned Chinese group China Guangdong Nuclear Power Corp., along with access to state secrets concerned with nuclear power, which raised a few eyebrows connected to national security.

The government also awarded Hinkley C a Government Infrastructure Loan Guarantee, a type of financial support that is available to a large infrastructure project.

The plant was then expected to cost around £14 billion. Latest estimates are £18 billion. The Treasury agreed to guarantee some of the cost, reducing the impacts on EDF’s balance sheet and allowing a low strike price for the electricity generated – despite a Coalition Government commitment at the time not to subsidise nuclear power.

The wrong technology

Part of the problem is that the UK government backed the wrong technology: the European Pressurised Water Reactor (PWR). Not a single one of these has been completed.

The first, the 1,600 megawatt Olkiluoto 3 plant in Finland, was begun in 2005 and should have gone on line in 2009. It is still not generating power. The initial cost estimate was €3.7 billion; this has now risen to €8 billion.

A prominent factor in Centrica’s decision to pull out was EDF’s progress in construction a second plant at Flamanville, France. When construction began in 2007 it was to have cost €3.3 billion, according to Le Monde. The price tag is now €10.5 billion and it is seven years late.

Martin Horwood, a British MP, in a debate in the UK Parliament [Hansards 7 Feb 2013 : Column 471] about subsidies for nuclear power in 2013 said: “The Energy Fair group of energy consultants and academics has stripped out all subsidies and says that the real cost of nuclear power is at least £200 per MWh, which is much more than the cost of offshore wind power at £140 per MWh or that of onshore wind power at less than £90 MWh.”

British taxpayers will pay the French £45 billion for Hinkley C

The strike price was eventually settled at £92.50/MWh over 35 years – in 2012 £s, linked to the CPI index. At the time that was about double the wholesale power price. Now it’s almost treble.

Professor Tom Burke, who was an adviser to a previous Government, commented that: “this would require a subsidy of £1 billion/year above today’s wholesale price for electricity. This would lead to a transfer of £30 billion to EDF”. He’s recently upgraded this estimate to £45 billion.

In order to continue to back the project EDF’s costs will be underwritten by the French government as well, which just announced last month that it would take its dividend in shares to help conserve cash for the company.

EDF has a key role to play in keeping the lights on in Britain with low carbon electricity. It already manages eight existing nuclear power stations at sites across the country.

It is also coming to the end, on March 31, of what is believed to be the UK’s largest ever electricity supply contract by annual volume ever awarded by the Government Procurement Service, to supply an annual electricity consumption of about 7.6TWh over four-years to a “a vast range” of public buildings across England and Wales, from inner city academies to museums, from central Government departments to major hospitals, from defence sites, courts, to the British Museum, equivalent to powering 2.3 million typical households.

Because it was supplied from nuclear power, this contract helped the Government meet its Greening Government Commitments of a 25% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2015 from a September 2010 baseline. Even so, the government failed to meet its own targets for cutting the environmental impact of the state’s operations, according to its last annual report.

Questions to answer

Meanwhile, there remains the problem of the storage of nuclear waste. The UK doesn’t know what to do with its existing nuclear waste, let alone any future waste. The UK’s Public Accounts Committee has published a damning report on the subject.

Its Chair, Margaret Hodge, noted that: “a solution to the problem of long-term storage of the waste is as far away as ever. Taxpayers will have to foot the bill” and they “are not getting a good deal”.

Given all of this, the British and French governments have two questions to answer. Firstly: why do they persist in pursuing EPR technology when, for as long as they have been doing so, they have been warned against it on cost and technical grounds?

This is hugely important, especially in the context of the UK government’s widely criticised energy policy, which includes many government U-turns on support for renewable energy in the last six months, an increase in support for fossil fuels, persistent backing of shale gas, leading to criticism by many investors, such as asset manger Schroders, that confidence in the UK energy plans has “evaporated”. As a result of policy inconsistency and unpredictability Schroders recetly said it would no longer recommend clients invest in the energy sector.

At least the British government realised the folly of continuing to pursue unproven and over-expensive carbon capture and storage. With this precedent it should now abandon EPR.

The second question is: why does the British government instead not aggressively pursue energy efficiency, when it is proven to be far more cost-effective than investing in new generating plant, especially nuclear power?

Only last week the government’s own National Infrastructure Commission issued a report, Smart Power, arguing that a smarter use of power built around three innovations, interconnection, storage, and demand flexibility, could save consumers up to £8 billion a year by 2030, help the UK meet its 2050 carbon targets, and secure the UK’s energy supply for generations.

In the same week, a report from UNEP shows that the potential for energy policy to increase energy efficiency in industry alone is massive. (Disclosure: I am one of the authors.)

In a webinar to promote the report’s release, co-author Kit Oung made the overwhelming case, based on research: “A report from the University of Cambridge has said that 73% of energy used in industry can be saved using currently available technical know-how and technology.

“This could result in 22 power stations not needing to be built in 2020 if just between 21 and 47% of those savings were to be achieved in the UK. And yet, according to the International Energy Agency less than 1% of global average energy savings are achieved by industrial energy efficiency around the world.”

The above statistics, taken together, point to a complete failure to use economic and scientific evidence in the design and implementation of a sensible UK energy policy that would put security, efficiency, emission reductions and value for money at its heart.

It’s unlikely that we will get a proper answer to either of these questions from the British Government. So we must supply our own. As another of the report’s authors, Stephen Fawkes, puts it: “The problem is, politicians like big projects. By contrast, energy efficiency, although much more beneficial, is almost invisible, and is certainly lots of small projects.”

And energy projects don’t come much bigger than nuclear power. As Jimmy Cliff might have put it: “the bigger they come, the harder they fall.”

Labour must now choose

All of this shows why Labour finally see the folly of its continuing support for Hinkley C.

It must condemn the deal. It must use this stance to attack the folly of Tory policy.

And it must come up with a clean, green, nucelar-free low carbon energy policy based on demand reduction and demand management, renewable energy, community energy and energy storage – as Germany is doing – which would save everyone money: industry, consumers and the taxpayer.

 


 

David Thorpe is the Director at The One Planet Life and an environmental writes and journalist. He regularly blogs at Low Carbon Kid and has written many books including Best Practices and Case Studies for Industrial Energy Efficiency Improvement, Passive Solar Architecture Pocket Reference and A London Conversation: Business Briefing on Green Bonds.

This article was originally published by Low Carbon Kid.

Books by David Thorpe

 

Global emissions stand still as temperatures soar

The world continued to make progress towards a low-carbon economy during 2015, according to analysis by the International Energy Agency (IEA).

It says analysis of preliminary data for the year reveals that global energy-related emissions of carbon dioxide – the largest source of man-made greenhouse gas emissions – “stayed flat for the second year in a row.”

“Global emissions of carbon dioxide stood at 32.1 billion tonnes in 2015, having remained essentially flat since 2013”, says the IEA.

“Preliminary data suggest that electricity generated by renewables played a critical role, having accounted for around 90% of new electricity generation in 2015; wind alone produced more than half of new electricity generation.”

The IEA announcement is doubly welcome as some Arctic temperatures continue to warm bizarrely. It comes a day after reports from Fort Yukon in Alaska said temperatures there had reached up to 10°C higher than expected for this time of year.

And as reported today on The Ecologist, temperature rises recorded in January and then in February this year broke all records following two consecutive ‘hottest ever’ years in 2014 and 2015. Temperatures is some parts of the Arctic were as much as 16C higher than usual in February. The northern hemisphere as a whole was 2C warmer.

Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director, said of the emissions report: “Coming just a few months after the landmark COP21 agreement in Paris, this is yet another boost to the global fight against climate change.”

Global economy grows 3% showing new emissions disconnect

Significantly, the global economy continued to grow in 2015 by more than 3%, which the IEA says is further evidence that the link between economic growth and emissions growth is weakening.

In more than 40 years, it says, there have been only four periods in which emissions stood still or fell compared to the previous year. Three of those – the early 1980s, 1992 and 2009 – were associated with global economic weakness. But the recent stall in emissions comes amid economic expansion. According to the International Monetary Fund, global GDP grew by 3.4% in 2014 and 3.1% in 2015.

“The new figures confirm last year’s surprising but welcome news”, commented Birol. “We now have seen two straight years of greenhouse gas emissions decoupling from economic growth.

The IEA says global emissions of CO2 stood at 32.1 billion tonnes in 2015, having remained essentially flat since 2013. Its preliminary data suggest that electricity generated by renewables was critical, accounting for around 90% of new electricity generation in 2015. And wind alone produced more than half of new electricity generation.

The two largest emitters, China and the US, both registered a decline in energy-related CO2 in 2015. In the US, emissions fell by 2% because of a large switch from coal to natural gas for generating electricity.

In China, emissions declined by 1.5% as coal use dropped for the second year in a row. The economic restructuring towards less energy-intensive industries, and the government’s efforts to decarbonise electricity generation, forced coal use down. In 2015, it generated less than 70% of Chinese electricity, 10% below the 2011 figure. Over the same period, low-carbon sources jumped from 19% to 28%, with hydro and wind accounting for most of the increase.

But these declines were matched by increasing emissions in most other Asian developing economies and the Middle East, and also by a moderate increase in Europe.

Premature deaths

The IEA will provide more detail on the emissions in a special report on energy and air quality, to be released at the end of June.

The report will go beyond CO2 emissions and will provide a first in-depth analysis of the role the energy sector plays in air pollution, which causes 7 million premature deaths a year.

Meanwhile, the warming already stored in the atmosphere by past greenhouse gas emissions continues to produce striking results.

The US space agency, NASA, published data earlier this week that shows the average global surface temperature in February was 1.35C warmer than the average temperature for the same month between 1951 and 1980 – a far bigger margin than ever seen before.

Professor Stefan Rahmstorf, head of Earth system analysis at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, says: “We are in a kind of climate emergency now. This is really quite stunning – it’s unprecedented.”

So while the news of standstill CO2 emissions makes a welcome change after decades of increases, the world must aim to do much, much better, seeking to achieve big annual emissions reductions, and ultimately to reduce actual greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere.

 


 

Alex Kirby writes for Climate News Network, where this article was originally published. Some additional reporting by The Ecologist.

 

UK’s 3 billion waste coffee cups a year: let those who profit pay the cost

I was interviewed on BBC Radio Wales this morning about a proposal to bring in a disposable 25p coffee cup levy.

The other guest was a representative for the corrupt so called ‘Tax Payers Alliance‘, the climate-action blocking, secretively funded think-tank.

He went apoplectic at the suggestion. And I had a lot of fun pointing out to him that he appeared to want millions of pounds of British taxpayers’ money to be spent on every year on coffee cup waste disposal costs.

Over 3 billion such cups are thrown away every year in the UK. And no matter what the coffee shop chains say, the vast majority of them are not recyclable, as the paper is lined with plastic to make the cups more waterproof.

To me the craze for disposable coffee mugs is a classic symbol of our catastrophically destructive consumerism. I have long thought this was the next obvious target to slash pointless wasteful consumerism, once we had won the plastic bag levy.

But then it’s not just the plasticated cup that gets thrown away. There are also the billions of plastic lids, plastic or wooden stirrers, paper sugar sachets, carrier bags, paper serviettes and sometimes throwaway multiple cup carriers, all to be seen littering our streets, car parks and river banks!

In fact, the impact is global

With just a simple coffee we leave a colossal trail of waste in our wake. We bulldoze forests containing well over 350,000 trees each year just for the paper in the UK’s disposable coffee mug epidemic. That figure would go well over half a million when all the disposable paraphernalia that goes with them is included.

The plastic used for the lids uses enough oil to power a car for 375 million kilometres! And then there is the colossal environmental impact of the 400 billion cups of coffee humanity drinks globally every year!!

Coffee originated in the shadow of the jungle forests of east Africa. But now the two main producers are tropical Brazil and Vietnam. And in the 1970s, the coffee corporations developed sun-grown coffee plantations to replace traditional forest shaded cultivation. As the Rainforest Alliance reports,

“Decades ago, coffee farms were virtually indistinguishable from the surrounding forest. Traditional coffee-growing methods depended on the shade of the forest canopy, which supported local wildlife, migratory birds and better bean quality. In the 1970s the introduction of a new hybrid coffee plant requiring agrochemicals and full sun exposure led many farmers to cut down their forests and abandon their traditional ways. This high-tech approach to farming has devastated lands throughout the tropics.”

This sun-grown coffee now makes up 75% of global production, and has led to the loss of millions of acres of rainforest. Some 2.5 million acres of the precious biodiversity rich rainforests in Central America alone have been lost.

The switch to sun-grown coffee has also led to a massive increase in toxic herbicide usage to maintain bare ground around the coffee shrubs. Many of the herbicides are banned in the EU and US but not in coffee producing countries, putting plantation workers and local populations at risk.

One cup of coffee takes 140 litres of water to produce

The forest removal and open sun cultivation quickly dries out the soil. It thus requires vastly more local water resources, which damages wildlife habitats in rivers and streams and also disastrously leading to soil erosion and flash-flooding downstream – as the UK has recently realised is happening due to tree removal here for hill sheep-farming.

It is estimated that every cup of coffee drunk in the West, uses up to 140 litres of water to produce! This is nearly the same as our entire home daily mains-water usage of 150 litres per person.

As the natural forest insect predators such as birds and bats are also eliminated with sun grown coffee, toxic pesticide usage has also exploded. All of this because we have turned what is a lovely occasional luxury imported treat, intro something we want all day every day!

So what are the solutions?

  • Buy only shade-grown, organic and fair-traded coffee. Rainforest Alliance certification is a good way to be sure of sustainable, soil and forest-friendly farming methods.
  • Bring your own cup if going somewhere that offers only disposable cups. If you’re meeting a friend, take two!
  • Avoid coffee cup chains that only do disposables even for sit-down drinks.
  • Give up your daily addiction and instead view it as an occasional luxury treat instead.
  • Buy mint or herbal teas instead.
  • Grow your own easily produced fresh mint, sage or other herbs in your garden or on your window-ledge.
  • Encourage more coffee shops to give a discount for Bring Your Own Mug. Starbucks already give a 25p discount if you do. Use this online form to ask Costa’s to do the same!

And call on UK environment groups like Friends of the Earth to launch a wider campaign to introduce a 25p disposable coffee cup levy, with the funds raised going to pay for community / charity renewable energy schemes.

This could raise millions to be invested in such schemes and to provide free renewable energy for community and charity buildings. Like the hugely successful plastic-bag levy, it would slash the numbers by over 80% very quickly, radically reducing the associated environmental destruction.

And it would help to establish an important principle: to hold those who profit by producing waste – like the UK’s 3 billion coffee cups a year – responsible for its disposal.

Yes We Can!


 

Donnachadh McCarthy is an environmental campaigner and author.

Book:The Prostitute State – How Britain’s Democracy Has Been Bought‘ is available as an E-book and paper (100% recycled).

 

Shocking reality of climate change kicks in – but who’s listening?

And another one bites the dust. The year 2014 was the warmest ever recorded by humans. Then 2015 was warmer still. January 2016 broke the record for the largest monthly temperature anomaly. Then came last month.

February didn’t break climate change records – it obliterated them. Regions of the Arctic were were more than 16C warmer than normal – whatever constitutes normal now.

But what is really making people stand up and notice is that the surface of the Earth north of the equator was 2C warmer than pre-industrial temperatures. This was meant to be a line that must not be crossed.

Two degrees was broadly interpreted as the temperature that could produce further, potentially runaway warming. You can think of it as a speed limit on our climate impact. But it’s not a target speed.

If you are driving a car carrying a heavy load down a steep hill you’re often advised to change down from top gear and keep your speed low, as if you go too fast your brakes will fail and you will be unable to stop.

Less braking means more speed which means less braking – a dangerous runaway feedback loop. Hopefully the hill flattens out and you have enough straight road ahead to recover. If you don’t then you will be stopping much more abruptly.

Swamping Gaia with CO2 – it can’t end well

We are currently swamping the Earth’s ability to absorb greenhouse gases. 2015 saw the largest annual increase in carbon dioxide since records began – far higher than the Earth has experienced for hundreds of thousands of years.

More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere means higher temperatures. There is already one positive feedback loop in operation: the extra warming from our emissions is increasing the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere, which further increases temperatures. Fortunately, this is not a very strong feedback loop.

Unfortunately, there seem to be other, much more powerful ones lurking in the event of further warming. Tipping points such as the thaw of permafrost and release of the very powerful greenhouse gas methane in large quantities would drive world temperatures well beyond the 2C threshold.

Even if we came to our collective senses and rapidly reduced carbon emissions at that point, we would still have to revert to drastic geoengineering to rein in further warming. There is no guarantee that such climate brakes will work. If they fail, our civilisation would be on a collision course with a much hotter planet.

The safe-unsafe threshold of 2C recognises the significant amount of uncertainty there is over where dangerous warming really begins. It could be at more than 2C. Hopefully it is. But it’s not impossible that it is less. We need to bear in mind that it was only the northern hemisphere that crossed the 2C line.

Also, we need to factor in the monster El Niño that is having an effect on temperatures across the globe. In 2014, I predicted that 2015 would break record temperatures. This is not due to any psychic powers on my part, but the then very clear El Niño signal that was emerging.

Now, the really scary thing: the reaction (or lack of it)

So while temperature records may continue to be set for the rest of 2016, by the end of this year the situation should have cooled somewhat. Right? At times, it feels as if such statements are offered up as prayers in the hope that we are not in fact witnessing the beginning of abrupt and sustained climate change.

But what’s even scarier is the political, economic and social reaction to these landmarks in climate change. Have you heard any political speeches referring to these recent climate change records? Not one of the major Republican presidential candidates even ‘believes’ in human-produced climate change, let alone that it is something to worry about.

How was the stock market this morning? It appears febrile enough to lurch from euphoric boom to catastrophic bust on the basis of bland statements from central bankers but proves remarkably deaf to evidence that the entire industrial and financial system is headed for disaster.

Know what’s trending on Twitter as I write? A photoshopped giant dog, the latest Game of Thrones trailer and Kim Kardashian’s naked body. Actually, it’s mainly Kim Kardashian’s naked body and people’s responses to it. Followed by people’s responses to the responses.

It would be churlish of me to deny people the pleasure of looking at pictures of a photograph of a cuddly dog adjusted in order to make it appear both cute and monstrous. But we appear disinterested, either through denial or desensitisation, to the environmental changes happening right in front of our eyes.

There are sure to be more climate records broken this year. But we treat them as we treat new fashions, phones or films. More novelty, newer features, more drama.

We seem unable to understand that we are driving such changes: record breaking changes that will ultimately break our civilisation, and so scatter all that we obsess and care about.

 


 

James Dyke is Lecturer in Complex Systems Simulation, University of Southampton.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

 

Europe’s biggest polluters land €24 billion carbon windfall

A new analysis of carbon emissions allowances shows how some of Europe’s most polluting industries have earned a €24 billion windfall from 2008 to 2014, under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS).

This is the main policy used across the EU to ‘cost-effectively’ reduce CO2 emissions across industry.

The findings in a report Calculation of additional profits of sectors and firms from the EU ETS, from independent environmental analysts CE Delft, adds momentum to calls from MEPs and campaigners for an overhaul of the policy ahead of the negotiations to revisit the ETS rules this year at EU level.

The sectors profiting most from pollution payouts have been iron and steel, cement, refineries and petrochemicals. The sum netted by industry over the period is more than 10 times the amount the EU has spent on ‘innovation’ under the EU ETS.

With highly profitable companies such as ArcelorMittal and Lafarge benefiting from the windfall, the report adds to existing criticism of the scheme.

The report identifies three ways industry has secured windfall profits through the scheme:

  • Companies were awarded too many free emissions allowances that they could sell for a profit in the market;
  • Companies bought cheaper international offsets to comply with their targets, and were able to sell remaining free allowances for a profit on the market.
  • Companies made their consumers pay for non-existent carbon costs (by passing through the ‘costs’ of freely obtained emission allowances).

However, given that the analysis – commissioned by Carbon Market Watch – was limited to 19 of the EU’s 28 Member States, the actual figure of subsidy awarded is likely to be significantly higher across the region as a whole.

The research also underscores the importance of ongoing negotiations to change the current rules, highlighting how outcomes must prevent further exploitation of the EU ETS at the expense of European taxpayers.

Femke de Jong, EU Policy Director at Carbon Market Watch explains: “Instead of making the polluter pay, energy-intensive companies are allowed to pollute for free under the EU ETS. Even worse, they are able to profit from their pollution to the tune of billions. It’s European taxpayers that are picking up this bill as governments forego scarce public money.”

‘Carbon leakage’ costs are being passed on as profit

Findings also highlight that ‘carbon leakage’ claims by polluters, often used as means to justify special treatment for various industrial sectors – and allocation of the free permits – are unsubstantiated.

The term ‘carbon leakage’ refers to a hypothetical situation where companies transfer production to countries with weaker climate change policies to lower their production costs. However, the report demonstrates that the EU ETS has been a profit, rather a cost, for industry.

The report moreover shows that most of the industrial sectors pass on at least part of the ‘cost’ of free allowances in product prices in which case they are at lower to no risk of carbon leakage according to the ETS directive. “If costs are passed through, free allocation is not a good instrument to combat eventual carbon leakage” says Sander de Bruyn, Senior Economist at CE Delft.

So far, no evidence has been found for production displacement due to the EU ETS. Energy intensive companies themselves have also reported to their shareholders that competitiveness risks of the EU ETS are not an issue for them.

Femke de Jong, adds: “Today’s findings bust open the industry myth of carbon leakage. There has never been evidence to back-up the relocation threats made by industry. In light of the Paris Agreement that helps to level the playing field to cover over 95% of global emissions, the concept of overgenerous allocation of free pollution permits in the EU ETS can no longer be entertained by decision makers.”

The policy needs a rapid overhaul

Having given out 11 billion free pollution permits over the 7 years in question, Member States missed out on at least €137 billion in auctioning revenues. Giving away free emission allowances also reduces the incentive of companies to produce more efficiently or to invest in breakthrough technologies that reduce CO2.

“The EU ETS reform must help achieve the decarbonisation objectives of the European economy whilst allowing a “just transition” for all workers without undermining quality of life or generating windfall profit, comments Montserrat Mir, ETUC Confederal Secretary in charge of climate and energy issues.

“The EU must adopt a real low-carbon industrial policy and take appropriate measures to ensure the EU ETS effectively contributes to a socially fair transition to a low-carbon economy.”

In the coming months, European policymakers are revisiting the rules under which industrial sectors are able to receive free pollution permits. MEP Jytte Guteland, the S&D spokesperson on the EU ETS revision commented:

“Europe can no longer afford the windfall profits that have occurred during the current system. The overall ambition of the ETS must be to gradually move towards ever increasing auctioning, as this is the underpinning logic of the system and a fair solution for market actors.”

MEP Bas Eickhout, the Greens / EFA spokesperson on the EU ETS added: “Environmental and health related costs induced by industrial activities should not be borne by society, but by the ones that cause them. This is not at all the case under the current EU ETS. On the contrary, companies make huge profits out of the pollution permits which they received for free.

“There is only one solution: the handing out of free emission allowances has to be phased out rapidly.”

 


 

Source: Carbon Market Watch.

 

Shocking reality of climate change kicks in – but who’s listening?

And another one bites the dust. The year 2014 was the warmest ever recorded by humans. Then 2015 was warmer still. January 2016 broke the record for the largest monthly temperature anomaly. Then came last month.

February didn’t break climate change records – it obliterated them. Regions of the Arctic were were more than 16C warmer than normal – whatever constitutes normal now.

But what is really making people stand up and notice is that the surface of the Earth north of the equator was 2C warmer than pre-industrial temperatures. This was meant to be a line that must not be crossed.

Two degrees was broadly interpreted as the temperature that could produce further, potentially runaway warming. You can think of it as a speed limit on our climate impact. But it’s not a target speed.

If you are driving a car carrying a heavy load down a steep hill you’re often advised to change down from top gear and keep your speed low, as if you go too fast your brakes will fail and you will be unable to stop.

Less braking means more speed which means less braking – a dangerous runaway feedback loop. Hopefully the hill flattens out and you have enough straight road ahead to recover. If you don’t then you will be stopping much more abruptly.

Swamping Gaia with CO2 – it can’t end well

We are currently swamping the Earth’s ability to absorb greenhouse gases. 2015 saw the largest annual increase in carbon dioxide since records began – far higher than the Earth has experienced for hundreds of thousands of years.

More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere means higher temperatures. There is already one positive feedback loop in operation: the extra warming from our emissions is increasing the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere, which further increases temperatures. Fortunately, this is not a very strong feedback loop.

Unfortunately, there seem to be other, much more powerful ones lurking in the event of further warming. Tipping points such as the thaw of permafrost and release of the very powerful greenhouse gas methane in large quantities would drive world temperatures well beyond the 2C threshold.

Even if we came to our collective senses and rapidly reduced carbon emissions at that point, we would still have to revert to drastic geoengineering to rein in further warming. There is no guarantee that such climate brakes will work. If they fail, our civilisation would be on a collision course with a much hotter planet.

The safe-unsafe threshold of 2C recognises the significant amount of uncertainty there is over where dangerous warming really begins. It could be at more than 2C. Hopefully it is. But it’s not impossible that it is less. We need to bear in mind that it was only the northern hemisphere that crossed the 2C line.

Also, we need to factor in the monster El Niño that is having an effect on temperatures across the globe. In 2014, I predicted that 2015 would break record temperatures. This is not due to any psychic powers on my part, but the then very clear El Niño signal that was emerging.

Now, the really scary thing: the reaction (or lack of it)

So while temperature records may continue to be set for the rest of 2016, by the end of this year the situation should have cooled somewhat. Right? At times, it feels as if such statements are offered up as prayers in the hope that we are not in fact witnessing the beginning of abrupt and sustained climate change.

But what’s even scarier is the political, economic and social reaction to these landmarks in climate change. Have you heard any political speeches referring to these recent climate change records? Not one of the major Republican presidential candidates even ‘believes’ in human-produced climate change, let alone that it is something to worry about.

How was the stock market this morning? It appears febrile enough to lurch from euphoric boom to catastrophic bust on the basis of bland statements from central bankers but proves remarkably deaf to evidence that the entire industrial and financial system is headed for disaster.

Know what’s trending on Twitter as I write? A photoshopped giant dog, the latest Game of Thrones trailer and Kim Kardashian’s naked body. Actually, it’s mainly Kim Kardashian’s naked body and people’s responses to it. Followed by people’s responses to the responses.

It would be churlish of me to deny people the pleasure of looking at pictures of a photograph of a cuddly dog adjusted in order to make it appear both cute and monstrous. But we appear disinterested, either through denial or desensitisation, to the environmental changes happening right in front of our eyes.

There are sure to be more climate records broken this year. But we treat them as we treat new fashions, phones or films. More novelty, newer features, more drama.

We seem unable to understand that we are driving such changes: record breaking changes that will ultimately break our civilisation, and so scatter all that we obsess and care about.

 


 

James Dyke is Lecturer in Complex Systems Simulation, University of Southampton.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.