Rich Nations' Greenhouse Gases Fell in 2006 - Survey
NORWAY: September 29, 2008
OSLO - Rich nations' greenhouse gas emissions dipped for the first time in
five years in 2006, easing 0.1 percent despite robust economic growth, a
Reuters survey of the latest available information showed on Friday.
The figures were less gloomy than a report this week, based on scientist
estimates to 2007, which said world emissions were surging, led by rocketing
growth in poor countries such as China and India twinned with a tiny rise by
industrialised nations.
The Reuters survey, of data submitted by 40 industrialised nations to the UN
Climate Change Secretariat and against which the UN judges compliance on
cutting emissions, indicated 2006 emissions fell to the equivalent of 18.01
billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from 18.03 billion in 2005.
A mild US winter cut demand for energy for heating while rising oil prices
were a possible factor restraining growth.
Most experts reckoned that a drive for energy efficiency by rich nations has
stalled in recent years, despite programmes to fight global warming.
And economic growth, estimated at 3 percent for advanced economies in 2006
by the International Monetary Fund, had been expected to push up emissions.
"It's a bit surprising to find a fall for 2006," said Knut Alfsen, research
director of the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research
in Oslo.
Overall emissions by developing nations last declined in 2001, when the
Sept. 11 suicide hijacker attacks on the United States aggravated an
economic slowdown.
Current economic turmoil is likely to cut emissions in 2008. Governments are
working on a new long-term treaty to cut emissions to avert heatwaves,
floods, droughts and rising seas projected by the UN Climate Panel.
SMOKESTACK COLLAPSE
The government data, due to be compiled for official release in October,
also showed that emissions were 4.7 percent below levels in 1990, the
benchmark year for a UN assault on global warming, largely because of a
collapse in smokestack industries in the former Soviet bloc.
The Reuters survey shows that Turkey's emissions have risen most since 1990
among industrialised nations, by 95 percent. Latvia's are down furthest, by
56 percent.
On Thursday, the Global Carbon Project of leading experts said that world
emissions of carbon dioxide were growing four times faster since 2000 than
in the 1990s. The surge was led by developing nations, which do not report
to the United Nations.
"The rich countries' emissions (until 2007) are relatively flat...the
numbers we have show a very slight increase," said Corinne Le Quere of the
University fo East Anglia, one of the scientists leading the carbon project.
"Developing nations are emitting more, faster than we thought, and the rich
nations' improvements in energy are not as quick as expected," she told
Reuters.
Rising oil prices, which ranged from about US$60 to $75 a barrel in 2006,
might have helped dampen emissions.
"The increasing oil price should give an impact on fossil fuel use," Alfsen
said. "But some of that demand is shifting to coal" rather than going to
energy savings or towards renewable energies such as wind or solar power.
More than 190 governments have agreed to work out a deal by the end of 2009
to succeed the UN's Kyoto Protocol, which obliges 37 rich nations to curb
emissions until 2012.
Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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