Eco Pax Mundi Network

Climate justice and a critique of carbon trading

Posted by Vito on December 9, 2009 |

Upsetting the Offset A new book has been just launched to coincide with COP15 at Copenhagen: Upsetting the Offset: The Political Economy of Carbon Markets, a collection of papers edited by Steffen Böhm and Siddhartha Dabhi, of University of Essex. For those of you in or around Copenhagen, the book will be presented at Lund University, Sweden on December 15, and at the Copenhagen Business School on December 16. Vito De Lucia of Eco Pax Mundi has contributed an article to said book (here’s the pre-print version: Hegemony and Climate Justice: a Critical Analysis), but the whole book is available as a free download (PDF, 4.5 Mb). The press release follows.

Why Carbon Offsetting Will Not Save the Planet

Global carbon markets may well have been hailed as the saviour of the planet by reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but in many ways they are doing more harm than good, according to new evidence. In fact, two academics from the University of Essex argue that measures put in place to reduce carbon emissions following the Kyoto Protocol on climate change have only made matters worse.

Launched to tie-in with the United Nations Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen (COP15), Dr Steffen Böhm and Siddhartha Dabhi’s new book, Upsetting the Offset: The Political Economy of Carbon Markets, challenges the environmental claims made about carbon markets and carbon offsetting schemes. The book – which collates contributions from more than 30 leading experts – is another voice in the growing criticism about the business of carbon and how it has failed to deliver promised reductions in greenhouse gases.

Few would argue that climate change is the biggest challenge the world has ever faced, and reducing our carbon footprint is essential to the future of the planet. Carbon offsetting has become a multi-billion-dollar global business which has captured the imagination of organisations worldwide who want to do something to help combat global warming. The reality, however, is that many of these schemes have actually made matters worse.

Dr Böhm and Mr Dabhi, of the University of Essex-based Essex Business School, advise governments, businesses and other organisations to reduce their carbon footprint by undertaking initiatives closer to home than funding carbon offsetting programmes in deprived countries thousands of miles away.

‘Carbon offsetting and carbon markets haven’t really delivered the reductions of greenhouse gas emissions they claimed and in many ways have just made the problem worse,’ they explained. ‘These schemes have often just provided an incentive for big polluting companies to continue emitting greenhouse gases rather than to change their ways.’ ‘Often, carbon offsetting schemes have very negative effects on local communities and eco-systems in developing countries.’

The book contributes to a growing field of critics of carbon markets by highlighting several up-to-date examples of where the system has failed and often led to negative social, economic and environmental impacts in deprived countries.

‘Carbon markets simply don’t address the underlying and root causes of climate change, which is an over-consumption of finite fossil fuels,’ added Dr Böhm and Mr Dabhi. ‘We are addicted to oil, gas, coal and a whole range of other fossil fuels, which, when burned for heating, electricity generation or other usages, release greenhouse gases. It is now time to make up for the lost decade since Kyoto and start to deal with our underlying reliance on fossil fuels.’

Ends

Note to editors:

For more information or to interview Dr Steffen Böhm and Siddhartha Dabhi, please call the University of Essex Communications Office on 01206 872400 or email comms AT essex.ac.uk

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