Air Pollution, Clean Energy and Climate Change. Anilla Cherian
hopeful that: ‘Despite Parties falling short of agreeing on issues related to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement and on the launch of cooperative instruments – essential tools for enhancing the efficiency of mitigation efforts and increasing finance for adaptation – most technical issues relating to the market‐based and non‐market approaches under Article 6 were resolved in 2019. COP 26 will be tasked with sealing the deal on Article 6’ (UNFCCC 2020, p. 24).
The idea that comprehensive action on climate change and clean energy for the poorest and most vulnerable can be catalyzed by well‐intentioned celebrities who fly around imploring the world, or by the glacial pace of nation‐state‐driven textually based negotiations, while exposure to toxic levels of fossil fuel related air pollution for those cannot afford air filters/purifiers continue unabated is hard to justify. Decades ago, the UN sustainable development community universally agreed on the primacy of poverty eradication as a global goal and reaffirmed the same in both the 2030 SDA and the PA. The UN‐led global community has to face up to the facts that action on climate change needs to first and foremost address the needs of the poor and vulnerable, and that avoiding linked action to curb fossil fuel related air pollution contravenes the logic of its ambitious SDA. Today, it is hard to deny that our shared human propensity to pollute extends into the air we breathe, the food and water we consume, and is especially pernicious for millions who live at the intersection between energy related air pollution and adverse climatic impacts. It is precisely this linkage between inefficient and polluting energy sources and air pollution that merits urgent attention not just by the UN member states and organizations focused on the SDA and PA but also by NNSAs including the local and municipal governments, civil society groups, the energy private sector, as well as city and regionally based entities.
The UN’s SDA is anchored by 17 SDGs, including two entirely separate goals on affordable and clean energy (SDG 7) and climate change (SDG 13) (see Figure 1.6). What is unambiguous is that the SDGs and the PA both make poverty eradication by 2030 a central priority. The SDA’s ‘pledge that no one will be left behind’ is expressly focused on poverty eradication, but it includes two separate SDGs on sustainable energy and climate change: SDG 7: ‘Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all’ (SDG 7); and SDG 13: ‘Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts’. What makes the SDA and the PA historically unique is that they share a priority on poverty eradication and are intended to be implemented in an integrated manner. Together, these two global agreements were envisaged to dramatically improve human well‐being and sustainable development in all countries. But the problem is that a detailed examination of two separate intergovernmental negotiating tracks on energy for sustainable development and climate change that were used to arrive at the SDGs and the PA revealed that the existence of segregated policy goals and targets on sustainable energy and climate change and an overall lack of integrated action on energy related air pollution (Cherian 2015).
Figure 1.6 SDGS in the UN’s 2030 sustainable development agenda.
Source: UN website, About the Sustainable Development Goals (2021).
With the 2030 full implementation deadline looming for the SDGs and the PA, it is time to ask what is being done in terms of integrated action to curb SLCPs and reduce public health and morbidity burdens associated with energy related air pollution exposure? Both the PA and the SDGs are voluntary agreements with no legal penalties or obligations for individual countries to meet commitments. It is time to ask whether UN member states should be the sole arbiters of global climate goals based on tense intergovernmental textually driven negotiations that have to date not considered actions to curb SLCPs and toxic levels of air pollution. The role of NNSAs – including local/municipal governments and the private sector – are arguably important in addressing the enormity of the challenges associated with intersecting challenges of climate change, lack of access to clean energy and air pollution. The gravity of the linked crises of climate change and air pollution crises necessitates looking beyond segregated UN policy and goal silos on clean energy and climate change and asking:
How exactly has air pollution been addressed at the global and regional level within the UN’s broad SDA?
Is there an integrated global policy nexus on clean air, clean energy and climate action that is responsive to the needs of those most impacted by energy related air pollution, lack of access to clean energy and climate vulnerabilities?
What is the role for NNSA partnerships including regional and city‐based modalities that integrate action on clean air, clean energy and climate challenges in countries like India where the scale and scope of increasing access to clean energy and curbing air pollution intersect for millions of lives?
The identification of air pollution as the world’s single largest environmental health risk by the WHO merits a careful examination as to how globally responsive action on air pollution has been integrated with SDG 7 (increasing access to clean energy for all) and SDG 13 (climate). Are segregated policy goals on sustainable energy for all (SDG 7), sustainable cities and communities (SDG 11) and climate change (SDG 13) adequately positioned to address the inequitable health burdens imposed on those who have contributed the least in terms of per capita GHG emissions but who rely heavily on polluting solid fuels for their basic needs? The year 2020 was billed as the year for conclusive UN agreement on the PA’s modalities. But, the COVID‐19 global pandemic revealed a less than palatable global truth, namely, a collective global failure or, more euphemistically put, a global disconnect between the early identification of climate change within the context of poverty eradication and the growing public health crisis of air pollution, both of which disproportionately and negatively impact on poorer households, communities and cities.
The historical role of NNSAs – fossil fuel and cement producers – in terms of anthropogenic GHG emissions has been far more significant than previously discussed. As highlighted in ‘Tracing anthropogenic carbon dioxide and methane emissions to fossil fuel and cement producers, 1854–2010’ (Heede 2014). Heede’s analysis focused on commercial and state‐owned entities responsible for producing fossil fuels and cement as the primary sources of GHGs that have driven and continue to drive climate change, and found that ‘nearly two‐thirds of historic carbon dioxide and methane emissions can be attributed to 90 entities’ (emphasis added, 2014, p. 241). The powerful role of fossil fuel‐driven industry groups and countries in stymieing action at the national and global level is hardly surprising, but still worth highlighting in terms of the tenacious duration and hold of such lobbying efforts.
Baumgartner et al.(2009) demonstrated the impact of lobbying on policy changes – essentially in determining who wins and loses. Efforts to mitigate climate change unleashed enormous lobbying interests both within countries like the US and at the global level from the very start of global negotiations on climate. Over two decades ago, Ross Gelbspan highlighted what he termed ‘a most impressive campaign’, which he characterized as an ‘assault on our sense of reality’ within the US Congress which allowed for a successful war waged on science and which has been a ‘potent weapon on the international stage, permitting the corporate coal and oil interests ‐ in tandem with the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other coal and oil exporting nations ‐ to frustrate diplomatic attempt to address the crisis meaningfully’ (Gelbspan 1997, p. 9). More recently, Brulle (2018) estimated that the lobbying expenditures related to climate change legislation in the US Congress from 2000 to 2016 was over $2 billion, constituting 3.9% of total lobbying expenditures. Led by fossil fuel and transportation corporations, utilities and affiliated trade associations, these lobbying efforts were found to dwarf those of environmental organizations and renewable energy corporations.
It is time to question whether the UN‐led global SDA can respond effectively to the needs of socio‐economically marginalized households, communities and countries