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Subject: New Event - Nature: Our Best Climate Technology?
Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2016 12:58:35 +0000
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Nature: Our Best Climate Technology?
Thursday 9th Feb, 7pm, Savoy Place
It was historic. The 2015 Paris climate agreement saw every
member country of the UN pledge to cut its carbon emissions to
zero by the second half of this century and keep global warming at
well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels.
There's just one problem. To reach this goal the world would need
to shut down all of its coal-fired power stations by 2025 and ditch
the combustion engine entirely by 2030. To reach its own targets.
the UK will need to decarbonise the vast majority of its electricity
supply within a mere 15 years. Eliminating fossil fuels this way is
going to be extremely challenging. An extra lever is needed to
reach the Paris climate targets. But from where?
The answer, many voices are now suggesting, is to use nature
itself as a climate technology. Artificial carbon-capture
technologies are still in the lab, and will be expensive and difficult
to scale up quickly enough. But, say experts, we already possess
a ready-made, affordable system of carbon sequestration with
billions of years of
behind it - soil, peatlands, wetlands and
grasslands. Better managed, restored and protected, these
ecosystems could provide more than a third of the carbon
reductions needed by 2030 to keep to the 2°C limit.
On February 9th
in partnership with The
Nature Conservancy, will bring together some of the leaders in
this field to examine how nature itself can be harnessed to cut our
carbon emissions.
Take forests. Conventional wisdom says that we shouldn't be
cutting down trees. On the contrary, say some experts, with the
right safeguards in place harvesting trees could be at the core of a
new low-carbon bio-economy. Timber buildings, for example, can
act as long-lasting carbon stores, at the same time as reducing
the need for concrete and steel, which produce more than 5% of
atmospheric carbon emissions.
Speakers
Justin Adams
Global Managing Director for Lands at The
Nature Conservancy, one of the world's biggest
environmental and conservation organisations,
where he specialises in sustainable agriculture,
forests and smart infrastructure. He was
formerly a senior executive at BP, and senior
adviser to the World Bank.
Tony Juniper
Sustainability adviser and former executive
director of Friends of the Earth. He is the author
of What Has Nature Ever Done For Us: How
Money Really Does Grow on Trees and What
Nature Does For Britain, and is co-author with
HRH Prince of Wales of Harmony: A New Way
of Looking at Our World.
Remaining speakers to be announced
Chair
Kemal Ahmed
Economics editor at the BBC. He was formerly
the BBC's business editor and political editor at
The Observer, and Director of Communications
at the Equality and Human Rights Commission
from 2007 to 2009.
EFTA00710474
It's not only wood. Other solutions - such as growing more crops
while using less land, or restoring mangroves and wetlands -
present opportunities for carbon storage at scale. Unleashing
nature's own 'carbon-capture' technology could be as significant
as stopping burning oil.
But how feasible are these solutions on a global scale? Some
argue that such measures are not practical, and that they'll disrupt
the livelihoods of farmers, especially in emerging economies,
where agriculture and forestry are still the major source of
economic progress.
Is nature the great, abundant technology that we have failed to
tap? Or would it limit economic progress for those dependent on
agriculture and forestry? How to reconcile these risks with the
opportunity for the climate?
Join us on February 9th hear our panel of experts, and make up
your own mind.
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EFTA00710475
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