Monday, December 21, 2009 - 3:41 PM

What happened in Copenhagen? The answer is: not much. Facing a very real possibility of complete failure -- a two-year buildup to a cacophonous conference that ended in de facto deadlock -- a select group of major powers cobbled together a non-binding “agreement” to undertake various purely voluntary actions, aimed at an arbitrary target for limiting future atmospheric warming. As Greenpeace noted on its Twitter page: “2 years planning, 2 weeks negotiating = worse than half-assed deal in the last 2 hours. Climate change you can believe in.” And I assume you didn’t missed the symbolism of Obama leaving the conference a day early so he could get back to Washington before it snowed.
Environmental issues aren’t my main thing, you understand, but I can’t resist the urge to offer a few comments.
First, you shouldn’t be surprised by this outcome, especially if you’ve been reading this blog. As the Economist noted a week or so ago, “Climate change is the hardest political problem the world has ever had to deal with.” In addition to the scientific uncertainties (not about the fact of climate change, but about the impact of different policy responses), dealing with man-made climate change is a classic collective action problem. All countries would like to avoid the consequences of atmospheric warming, but they would also like someone else to pay the costs of addressing it. Furthermore, the worst negative consequences won’t be evenly distributed and won’t occur for several decades, which means that today’s leaders would have to impose costs on their citizens now in order to leave future generations better off. That’s do-able, but hardly a tempting prospect for most politicians. In addition, there is still no consensus on the best way to proceed: some states favor “cap and trade” systems while other prefer a straightforward “carbon tax.” Finally, the main polluters are in very different economic circumstances; the developed world created the problem but now wants to get rising powers like China and India to undertake potentially costly measures that could slow their own growth. Needless to say, that's not very attractive to Beijing or New Delhi. Toss in the reality that any agreement would be unwieldy, expensive, and rife with verification problems, and you have an issue that makes reforming health care here in the United States look absurdly simple by comparison.
Second, the outcome in Copenhagen does lend support for FP chief Moises Naim’s concept of “minilateralism.” If you can’t get 192 states to agree on a global agreement (and it sure looks like you can’t), then focus on getting the biggest economies (who are the biggest source of the problem and the states with the resources to help the others), and see if you can get some sort of agreement among them. Thus, an optimist could see the face-saving “deal” that emerged at the very end of the conference as the building block for a new initiative that would eschew a grand global bargain in favor of a more focused deal among the major powers.
Third, this episode offers another revealing glimpse at Obama’s diplomatic style; indeed, his entire approach to politics. A master of soaring rhetorical style, he sets ambitious goals and imposes short deadlines (remember when he said he wanted to get a two-state solution in his first term?). When those lofty goals (inevitably) turn out to be unreachable, he grabs what’s available (a flawed health care deal, more photo-op "diplomacy" in the Middle East, a compromise “surge” in Afghanistan, etc.), and talks about the need to keep “moving forward.”
The “glass half full” interpretation is that this approach avoids complete deadlock and helps Obama avoid the appearance (and maybe the reality) of complete and obvious failure. And in some cases—most notably health care—you end up with a reform that is better than having done nothing, even if it is far less than the American people deserve. Given the complexity of some issues -- such as climate change -- and the barriers to bold action that are central to America’s checks-and-balances, multiple veto-point system of government, this may be the best he/we can do.
But there’s a “half-empty” version of this story too. By setting too many lofty goals, and showing a too-ready willingness to cut deals in order to save face, Obama is teaching his opponents that he’s never going to walk away and that they can always get a better deal if they stonewall him and drag things out as long as they can. That’s a problem no matter who is doing it: the GOP, China, the Karzai government, Benjamin Netanyahu, or Iran. What makes it worse is Obama’s penchant for thrusting himself into the middle of negotiations at the wrong time, as he did over the City of Chicago’s Olympics bid and as he appears to have done in Copenhagen as well. (If climate change is really that important he should have been there longer; if it was clear that no deal was going to happen, maybe he shouldn’t have gone at all).
But what really worries me is that Obama is in fact making the best of a set of bad options, and that it still won’t be nearly good enough.
ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP/Getty Images
EXPLORE:RESPONSE TO MINILATERALISM, DIPLOMACY, ENVIRONMENT, GLOBAL WARMING, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION, U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Reading this entry made me actually have a thought. The thought may sound screwy, but it’s a thought.
What if we look at this from a different perspective? In place of trying to fix something, how about taking the lead to show how we can build wealth and power by building something entirely new?
This reminds me of much of my career working with alcoholics. They love the booze, but they do not see what awaits them on the other side of health and prosperity.
Instead of a focus upon restricting pollution, why not ask others to join us in building new stuff that simply displaces the old polluting ways? To do that, we do not need a conference; we just need to get started building things like transportation systems that eliminate congestion and bad gases. No doubt China would love to help make the parts.
Is it possible to build solar power plants that can build fast trains?
To build power and wealth, we need to get the jump on everybody else and then ask them to become our sub-contractors. If we simply focus upon the problem, we will never have the necessary vision.
Taking that kind of initiative might even displace the interest groups’ power that probably plays a part in “solving the problem”.
Bob Spencer
Bob,
I agree with you. Let's take the lead and show what a little American ingenuity can do. I understand China's concerns; it is a developing nation with hundreds of millions living in poverty. China cannot afford to take the lead. We can and we sill succeed.
IPCC supposes eksponential growth of coal-production until 2100
What a discrace that that the 2500 scientist that have signed this unproven stuff about global warming, haven't figured out that there simply isn't enough coal on the planet for the exponential growth that they assume will happen until 2100. Their exponential growth would require that the coal production increased by 600 % - and there simply ain't that much coal on the entire planet! And likewise with oil. That means that the nations of the world out of shear necessity will have to look for other sources of energy, like more nuclear power plants, fuel cells, and perhaps even fusion power will be workable in 90 years time. (In Denmark we are just beginning pilot projects for pumping 70 C hot water up from 2,5 kilometer depths, and returning it at 17 C).
Such collective blunders by these scientists, makes one wonder what other mistakes they have made in their calculations. I am quite satisfied that the meeting came to nowhere; hopefully many of these flaws will then be duly exposed.
Viking age warm as well
Other times that saw expansion was the Bronze age and the Viking age, when the weather was warmer . I strongly believe that if it had been bitterly cold during the Viking age, the Vikings would probably have stayed home, whereas as we all now, nice warm weather spurs thing on - and in this context lets remember the increased food-production due to the warm weather. Maybe the time since the Little Ice age have been warmer than in the Viking Age - but our time also have seen the greatest economic expansion in the history of human kind, so it is quite logic - but what characterizes many of the proponents of human impact on the climate is 1) Their lacking sense of proportion and Their confusion of cause and effect. Cause it's the warm weather that have sped up human development, not the other way round.
And when coal and oil run out well before2100 (if these scientist exponential growth are to be believed) then human kind have only polluted -- to a serious extent -- with these fossil fuels for a very short time-span (around 150 years) - a tiny-tiny fraction of the age of the planet. And as this * study shows , increased CO2 in the atmosphere will disolve lots of CO2 in the oceans, where coccolithophores will produce calcium carbonate. And if you were watching the BBC series: Earth: The Power of the Planet, first episode: Volcanoes, - you will know that when these coccolithophores die, they sink to the bottom, and become rocks. And these rocks will eventually reach the end of the tectonic plate on which they lie, and be subducted into the Earths interior, heated up and then be released in the form of CO2 with volcanic eruptions. But this will take several hundreds million years, so it is stretching things to suggest that we today should feel bad about what is being released in hundreds of millions of years.
But it is interesting that many of these scientists do not recognize that the oceans contains species who are ready to use excess carbon. They just think that there are limits to what the oceans can absorb.
_________________
*) Documentation
Science Magazine, April 18, 2008: Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World
by M. Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez
Paul R. Halloran
Rosalind E. M. Rickaby
Ian R. Hall
Elena Colmenero-Hidalgo
John R. Gittins
Darryl R. H. Green
Toby Tyrrell
Samantha J. Gibbs
Peter von Dassow
Eric Rehm
E. Virginia Armbrust
Karin P. BoessenkoolOcean acidification in response to rising atmospheric CO2 partial pressures is widely expected to reduce calcification by marine organisms. From the mid-Mesozoic, coccolithophores have been major calcium carbonate producers in the world’s oceans, today accounting for about a third of the total marine CaCO3 production. Here, we present laboratory evidence that calcification and net primary production in the coccolithophore species Emiliania huxleyi are significantly increased by high CO2 partial pressures. Field evidence from the deep ocean is consistent with these laboratory conclusions, indicating that over the past 220 years there has been a 40% increase in average coccolith mass. Our findings show that coccolithophores are already responding and will probably continue to respond to rising atmospheric CO2 partial pressures, which has important implications for biogeochemical modeling of future oceans and climate.
aren't you making a reputational argument, though
and we know from Mercer (Reputation) and Press (Calculating) that reputations are seen differently by different people, and that they're not property rights but context specific. In other words, Obama may be amassing less of a detrimental reputation than one would otherwise think (or allude, as you do).
A former student
When someone like you says you are prepared to negotiate a hard cap with China, you are talking about a bad faith offer which would permanently lock in the disparity in wealth between the developed and developing world because you don’t intend to have the West undertake the kinds of cuts necessary to bring China on board.
I suspect what will happen is that once the actual situation becomes seriously damaging, we'll see a last-minute effort to cut emissions and the like, coupled possibly with some brute-force efforts to lower the temperature (like injecting a bunch of aerosols into the upper atmosphere). Since there will be some upsides, though, we'll end up bogged down on exactly how far to take some of the reaction, and the problem will continue.
Other times that saw expansion was the Bronze age and the Viking age, when the weather was warmer . I strongly believe that if it had been bitterly cold during the Viking age, the Vikings would probably have stayed home, whereas as we all now, nice warm weather spurs thing on - and in this context lets remember the increased food-production due to the warm weather.
It was only warmer and more beneficial in Europe. Other areas, like in the Americas, got droughts and the like. The Anasazi in particular got hit with a massive drought right in the middle of the 12th century.
The solution to the global warming problem is not political decisions but technological change. When, and it is a when and not an if, scientists and engineers develop (a) cheaper source(s) of energy that can do all the various things now done by hydrocarbons, it will not be necessary for nations to agree to cut carbon usage. It will then be to the advantage of all countries, no matter in what stage of development they may happen to be, to adopt that new source of energy. People concerned about global warming should advocate for more support for research and development.
It was inevitable that Obama would choose to go to Copenhagen because for a short period it was the world's most public stage and Obama loves to be front and center on the stage. So far, he has shown that it doesn't matter much to him what gets done as long as he can claim credit. The results may be good from time to time, but this is no way to run any country, never mind the world's leading power. There were people who understood this last year, and worked mightily to get the voters to do so as well, but for the most part they were silenced by the media and allegations of racism. Those of you who voted for Obama should acknowledge that you made a big mistake.
Fine column, Walt. My thoughts on Obama exactly.
I think you're being too harsh.
First, while his negotiating with the GOP has been ineffective, it doesn't have to be, as the fact that he's been able to get legislation passed over their objections.
Second, he is negotiating in many cases with regimes with interests that are simple diametrically opposed to US interests, and so the fact that he doesn't get what we want should be no surprise; it seems many people actually believe the hype that with Obama's election the world would actually love us. Sorry, but that was silly.
Copenhagen was a prime example of this: A meeting ostensibly to help solve global warming quickly descended into an anti-Capitalist hatefest starring the usual actors, such as Chavez (whose regime is entirely propped up by oil revs from capitalism!) and Mugabe. What was Obama to do in the face of this? Simply capitulate and transfer billions more of our money to these despots?
Mugabe is a despot and wasn't elected by the people. Chavez was elected in free and fair elections by the people of Venezuela. Just because he points out all the negative things which the big brother from the north has done in the past 150 years in Latin America doesn't make him a 'despot'. Double standards often come back to bite you in the ass, case in point, al-qaeda.
This piece does actually support it's author's sub-title: A Realist in an Ideological Age. Yes, realistically, two years of environmental planning will often fall subordinate to two-weeks of super-power negotiations. What happened in Copenhagen then amounts to ideological media reports, and a conference held in spite of the well-know realism that the U.S. and China have never been keen on any industry curtailments.
Realistically, over these past two years, there never has been a chance of mutual accord, concrete agreement or the realization of poli-industrial change. Especially not just days after revelation of the climate-gate eMails.
President Obama's contribution, of course, has been purely rhetorical. Neither he nor his administration actually generate ideas which can be research and analyzed into a plan of tasks leading to milestones stepping toward realization of solutions. This skill is called program management. Realistically, without program management skills, any executive-level speech amounts to unrealizable ideological rhetoric.
Organizational endeavors are constantly falling prey to this short-coming. Meanwhile, executives seem often to have a divine-right complex. G.W. Bush simply admitted words to the effect that he was chosen by God to lead the U.S. Mr. Obama also holds such an inner belief.
Though said at a comedy banquet, there exists no reason to select such a topic for comedy material...I wasn't born in a manger, born on Krypton, I was sent to save the planet Earth. The realism of the comedy however, is that swooping-in with rhetorical super-powers does not a solution make. That his rhetorical prowess has been key to his accomplishing his personal ambitions is the Rock of Gibraltar in Mr. Obama's modus operendi, his standard operational procedure...his view of success.
Swooping-in to Copenhagen—his Olympic Waterloo—with the confused notion that ideological rhetoric will actually save the day is sophomorically naive. It is the type of mistake a decent program manager does not make. Without sound negotiation skills, without the ability to waterfall together a practically implementable plan...all that exists is executive hot-air.
Please note that, we all have ideological hopes. We can all list-out our terms for Eutopia. The ability to develop a task-increment-able plan however is an hallmark separating glass-full rhetoric from half-empty realizations.
The real reason the world can say "no"
They have observed in the US Congress that, in the face of even the feeblest opposition, President Obama's Party, the Democrats, will spinelessl cave in to any demand whatsoever.
George W. Bush could propose the stupidist things, but he could count on lockstep Republican obedience. Barak Obama can count on a herd of jellyfish with gellatin where their spines once were.
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
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