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Surjit S Bhalla: Need for a change in climate
India should heed the Aesop dictum: Be careful what you wish for, lest it should come true
Surjit S Bhalla / New Delhi Nov 07, 2009, 00:38 IST

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh struck several chords when he suggested, via a leaked letter to the prime minister (PM), that the time had come for a gear shift in India’s policy towards climate control. Traditionalists roared disapproval, and climate-control negotiators seemed satisfied that order was restored. But there just might be more to the leaked letter.

I find it hard, perhaps impossible, to believe that the letter could have been written without the PM’s consent. The reason? Assume for a moment that the A-climate team decides to change its view. How should it, and how can it, change a major point of view? An obvious choice is a leaked letter. This way no one has responsibility; the Pandora’s box gets opened, the old can of worms disperse, and the policy gets changed. So, in my scenario, the whole change in policy was planned!

And for good reason. The old policy had outlived its usefulness, and it was somewhat inappropriate for a new world order, and a new India. There were two pillars to the old policy. First, developed countries caused the problem in the first place, so it was their moral responsibility to clean up the atmosphere and fund developing countries in their efforts. Any connection between the “moral” argument and the hackneyed, and obsolete, arguments of the “non-aligned” movement is not coincidental. Many had believed that India had graduated from moral posturing, but alas, that is (was?) news to our climate team.

It is true that the growth of developed countries, since the Industrial Revolution, has been a cause of climate change. But this growth occurred at a time when there was zero knowledge in the world that industrial growth would cause the problem. Even Einstein had not commented on this aspect. So, how can anyone be held accountable? Now the specious argument is often made, primarily by Indians, that ignorance of the law is no excuse. But we are not talking about any law here; by definition, when a law is formulated, the nature of the crime is known. In the case of climate change, the ex-post crime was not a crime; indeed, it was an ex-ante virtue. Indeed, that is what development and poverty reduction is mostly about — gains in per capita income, and gains traditionally came through intensive energy use.

The second foundation of India’s climate policy rests on its pledge to never exceed the per capita emission level of the developed countries. In 2007, India’s per capita emission was 1.2 tons, just one-tenth of the average for the developed countries. The Indian position seemed like a “no-brainer”, a no-cost commitment for the future. While there may be an argument for changing our outdated moral stance, there seemed to be little reason to change the “commitment not to exceed”, etc. Then why the attempt by the government to change its stance? The argument made by the traditionalists (paradoxically, in India, most traditionalists are of the Left persuasion) is that Jairam Ramesh was caving in to pressure from the West, especially America.

When in doubt, kick America and you cannot go wrong. And though it might change, America is the bad boy on climate change, along with India’s major non-aligned ally South Africa. But India’s commitment is not to exceed the developed country average, which at 11.7 tons/capita of CO2 emissions, was only 60 per cent of the average for the US (19.1 tons/capita). Even then, the commitment not to exceed a level 10 times as large seemed “reasonable”. Not really.

The popular misconception is that emissions are proportional to per capita income. Not so. The rate of change of emissions per capita with respect to income per capita is less than unity. This occurs because as countries become rich, they move out of industry and get into services; the latter is much less energy-intensive. For example, a Wall Street trader needs precious little energy input, besides a broadband. An automobile factory needs considerably more energy. So, as the US moves out of car production and India moves into car exports, the energy uses of the two economies will tend to converge.

The importance of this convergence is illustrated by the figures in the table (Click here for table). For 2007, actual data are reported; for 2025, the UN population projections are used along with forecasts of growth in per capita income. These forecasts are based on the growth experience of each country over the last five years, from 2004 to 2008. The world figures are the aggregates of about 140 countries. The model explaining emissions per capita (time-period 1990-2007) has the following explanatory variables — (log) per capita income, the square of this to capture non-linearity, the size of the middle class and the size of the rich class.

The model does not incorporate any explicit emission control policies, something that most parts of the developed world are committed to. The figures are for a “business-as-usual” situation. And in this scenario, India’s per capita emission rises to 7.4 tons by 2025, very close to the global average and about half the developed country average of 15.2 tons. But note that this is a business-as-usual model; the Europeans are committing themselves to an 80-95 per cent reduction from 1990 levels by 2050 and a 30 per cent reduction by 2020. In 1990, the developed country average was 7.5 and in 2007, 9.0. A 30 per cent reduction in even the latter figure would mean that CO2 emissions from developed countries are less than 5 in 2025 (5.25 in 2020). India, at that stage, with growth and development, and reduction in poverty and a high moral quotient, will be at 7.4, almost 50 per cent higher than the developed country average!

No matter what the assumptions, or the math, or the model, the traditional Indian policy towards climate change is untenable. This is perhaps what the “leaked” policy was trying to convey. It is time the traditional climate establishment saw the writing on the wall.

The author is chairman of Oxus Investments and anchor of Tough Talk, a talk show on NDTV profit; please visit www.oxusinvestments.com for an archive of articles, etc.

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