• China
    China’s EIA Rollback
    A decision to remove environmental impact assessment requirements for some Shanghai construction projects embodies a trend of sliding environmental standards as China's economy slows. It also draws questions about China's greater commitments to environmental protection.
  • India
    A Matter of Particular Concern: India’s Transition From Biomass Burning
    Aaron Steinberg is an interdepartmental program assistant at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.  On Sunday, the Indian Election Commission released the much anticipated polling dates for the 2019 general election. Amid the electoral preparations, opposition party members are accusing the incumbent, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, of using recent tensions in Kashmir to stoke nationalist sentiment. Political analysts say that Modi’s response to the tensions have indeed helped in preliminary polling, but the concern over domestic issues that had been haunting the prime minister remain during this politically pivotal juncture.   One of the centerpieces of the Modi government’s platform has been addressing air pollution, but his efforts to ameliorate the matter have reportedly fallen short. According to the latest data on air pollution, seven of the ten most polluted cities globally are in India’s Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP)—home to over half of the country’s population. One of the most common metrics used for air pollution is the concentration of suspended particulate matter that have a diameter less than 2.5 micrometers (PM2.5). Various factors contribute to poor air quality, but one culprit, residential energy use, has been identified as a primary contributor to emissions in the IGP. Last year, a study using recent data on PM2.5 concentrations found that residential biomass burning causes as much as 90 percent of the annual anthropogenic PM2.5 emissions in the IGP. The residential energy emissions come primarily from the 78 percent of people who burn biomass (usually in the form of agricultural residues, fuel wood, and dung cake) for cooking and heating, as it is the most affordable energy source for low-income households. Carcinogens from biomass burning contribute to an array of health issues, including respiratory and heart diseases, cancer, and stroke, all of which are central to India’s increasing burden of noncommunicable diseases. One New Delhi chest surgeon found that half his lung cancer patients are nonsmokers; when he started practicing thirty years ago, 80–90 percent of such patients were smokers. For many, breathing has become the new smoking. In 2016, the Modi government launched an initiative to address the issue. Known as Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY), it aims to create liquid gas connections for households below the poverty line and subsidizes state-owned fuel retailers for every new connection. The massive transition has made India the second-largest importer of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in the world, and it is poised to take the lead in 2019. Currently, India imports nearly 80 percent of its fuel to meet demand, leaving the supply vulnerable to price fluctuation and political whim. Amid India’s rising demand, importers looked to Iran as an additional source, becoming the country’s second-largest client. Major disruptions were expected in the wake of President Donald J. Trump’s renewal of sanctions, but India, along with eight other countries, were granted waivers, which prevented disruption. Had sanctions been carried out against Saudi Arabia, as was threatened in the wake of the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, PMUY would have faced severe disruptions.  India’s reliance on imports, combined with the subsidies given through PMUY, has put considerable strain on the country’s balance of payments. PMUY’s initial success helped justify the expenditure, but issues are beginning to arise as the program progresses. With general elections coming up in the spring, the Modi government appears to be doubling down on its efforts. PMUY has made impressive progress since its introduction; fifty million new LPG connections have been reported as of 2019. The program’s success has been credited with assisting Modi’s party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), in winning the 2017 legislative assembly election in Uttar Pradesh (UP), where PMUY was originally implemented. It is no coincidence that PMUY was launched in UP, which sends the most legislators to parliament of any state. The Modi government is looking for similar success in the upcoming election, but the longevity of PMUY is being questioned as low refill rates for the LPG cylinders indicate a return to biomass burning. Currently, PMUY beneficiaries pay for their stove and first cylinder refill in monthly installments; however, beneficiaries must pay market rates for subsequent refills. While PMUY has done well in creating LPG connections, many Indian households are finding it difficult to fund the refill of their LPG cylinders despite the incentives. In one UP district, refill rates sunk as low as 25 to 30 percent. When money is scarce, returning to biomass is an easy way to cut costs. As of early 2019, Modi is polling ahead of his closest competitor, Rahul Gandhi, but his lead has diminished in the past year. Failing to address the shortcomings of PMUY would be a major misstep for Modi and the BJP. The government’s current plan to increase LPG subsidies may help restore confidence in PMUY throughout the election period, but energy-source diversification is crucial to long-term success of the program. India’s shift from biomass is one facet of a larger low-carbon transition. LPG is an example of a low-carbon alternative, but converting to an energy source with greater domestic availability would help ensure greater stability for the program. One method suggested by the National Institution for Transforming India is complementing the new gas stoves with electric stoves, which could be powered by domestically sourced energy. Currently, India’s energy mix is dominated by coal, which will remain a fixture for the foreseeable future. Like biomass, coal is a major contributor to air pollution, so investing in cleaner, more efficient coal plants to power electric stoves would curb emissions from both sources. Although coal is dominant, renewable sources are a distant but growing second, outpacing the growth of coal in 2018. Today, renewable energy stands at around 20 percent of the energy mix and is projected to reach at least 48 percent by 2030. If increased access to alternatives to biomass burning are paired with a more diversified energy mix in India, PM2.5 levels would be drastically diminished, leading to greater quality of life for all, especially as renewables supplant coal. PMUY has been a successful first step in addressing biomass burning and improving India’s overall air quality, but as the BJP’s flagship energy program stands now, India’s air quality and its health are largely contingent on the price of and access to LPG.
  • Health
    The Global Health Nexus on Climate Change and Pollution
    Pollution kills nine million people each year and sickens many more, mostly in poorer nations. The global health effects of climate change are less well quantified, but also increasing with lower-income countries again bearing the brunt of greater food insecurity, increased rates of chronic respiratory illnesses, and shifts in malarial zones. CFR’s Global Health, Economics, and Development Roundtable Series held a discussion on the global health nexus between climate change and pollution and how a more coherent approach to these issues can advance progress at a time when some policymakers, especially in the United States, are unmoved by the environmental, health, and economic consequences expected in the coming decades. The featured speaker for this discussion was Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, dean for global health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and recent co-chair of the Lancet Commission on Pollution and Health.
  • China
    How Beijing Addresses Its Air Pollution Problem
    Back in 2013, China experienced its worst smog outbreak since 1961. At some point in January, the Air Quality Index (AQI) readings in Beijing were far beyond the levels health officials deemed extremely dangerous. In December, heavy smog engulfed twenty-five of China’s thirty-one provinces and municipalities, covering over a hundred large or medium cities, spanning over 1.4 million square kilometers, and affecting a population of over 800 million. The smog crisis prompted the Chinese government to launch an all-out “war” against air pollution. In September 2013, the State Council unveiled the “Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Air Pollution”, which aimed to improve overall air quality across the country over a five-year period. More specifically, it sought to reduce the level of PM10 (particulate matter that is ten micrometers or less in diameter) at cities above prefecture level by at least 10 percent compared to 2012 levels, and concentration of fine particulate matter PM2.5 (the most health-harmful air pollutant) in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region by around 25 percent. Beijing, in particular, was asked to bring PM2.5 concentration down to around sixty micrograms per cubic meter. These were by no means easy targets to fulfill. Indeed, until mid-2017 some Chinese environmental experts were still unsure whether Beijing could achieve its PM2.5 reduction targets. One predicted that it would take another two to three years. Yet the government was determined to beat the odds. By the end of 2017, it was clear that China had achieved almost all the major targets stipulated in the 2013 action plan. Based on data from 2013 and 2015, a study conducted by Tsinghua University also identified limited health benefits from the government’s anti-pollution measures: national population-weighted PM2.5 reductions accounted for nine percent of the attributable mortality abatements. These were impressive achievements in view of the implementation problems inherent in the policy process. Like in electoral democracies, political leaders in China typically face three major challenges in translating policy goals into desired actions. The first is information disadvantage: they have limited capacity in observing the actions or characteristics of local officials. The second is about leadership cohesiveness: the leaders themselves could disagree with each other in the policy process. The third is the limited range and credibility of the tools at their disposal for rewarding and punishing local implementers’ behavior. These problems appeared to have been mitigated under President Xi Jinping, who should be credited for elevating the environment as a central pillar of development by arguing, “green mountains and clear water are equal to mountains of gold and silver.” The action plan lays out clearer and more specific targets for local officials to fulfill. Beginning in 2013, China has also introduced a nationwide air quality monitoring system that publishes PM2.5-based AQI in real-time in seventy-four cities. By making the air pollution problem quantifiable, observable, and undeniable, the new system enables the central government to closely monitor local governments’ performance in policy implementation. Furthermore, the tighter concentration of political resources in President Xi in a hierarchical setting has made “going along to get along” or “emulation awareness” (kanqi yishi) the assumed motive in the officialdom. This makes it unlikely—even for his political rivals—to deviate from official positions when making policy statements or remarks, which is something that lower-level officials have previously been able to take advantage of in policy implementation. The political leader’s promise of future payoffs or punishments has gained further credibility through the anti-graft drive. Deeply unsettled by the campaign, officials at all levels now try to minimize political risk by looking to President Xi as a bellwether. As long as President Xi remains committed to the pollution control agenda, brazen disobedience or foot-dragging will be rare. In short, by restructuring bureaucratic incentives, the current political institutions help narrow the preference gap between the leaders and the led. Still, the new bureaucratic incentive structure has a tendency to distort the policy process, with sometimes unexpected and undesirable outcomes. If you would like to know why well-intended policies went awry, you can read my recent New York Times article here.
  • China
    Is China Serious About Pollution Controls?
    China is developing new tools to address its pressing environmental pollution, but these efforts are likely to be muted until fundamental changes are made to the country’s policy structure, writes CFR’s Yanzhong Huang.
  • China
    Tackling China’s Environmental Health Crisis
    Soaring levels of air, water, and soil pollution pose growing health risks and feed public discontent toward the government, but political hurdles prevent China from effectively addressing the problems, writes CFR’s Yanzhong Huang.
  • China
    How Will China Clean its Air?
    “I’ve been working my whole life on climate change. And now, because of policies to fight local air pollution, Chinese carbon emissions will peak and begin to decline in less than ten years, and our efforts on climate change will have nothing to do with it.” That was the message from one of several Chinese scholars, businesspeople, NGO staff, and officials I met over the last week in Beijing and Shanghai. One focus of my discussions was China’s massive air pollution problem: How, I asked people from a range of backgrounds, would China clean up the mess? The answer matters to non-Chinese observers not only because of its consequences for Chinese political stability but because China’s choices could have a big impact on global greenhouse gas emissions. Install scrubbers on coal-fired power plants to cut local air pollution and you do nothing to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. (You actually increase them a nudge.) Ditto if you simply move polluting industries away from the big cities. Switch to lower-carbon energy, though, and you get a twofer: reduced local air pollution and lower carbon emissions too. So I was heartened – and quite frankly surprised – to hear so consistently that people expect switching from coal to gas (along with penetration of zero-carbon energy) to not only be at the core of the Chinese strategy  to reduce local air pollution (not really news) but to actually be fairly successful. What’s the reasoning behind this? The big Chinese air pollution problem has to do with fine particulate matter, known as PM2.5. A lot of that comes from coal-fired power plants that could, in principle, have their emissions scrubbed. But it has been challenging to get companies to turn on their scrubbers even when it’s been possible to get them installed. And much of the coal use comes from heavy industry, where scrubbing emissions isn’t an option. That leaves two other choices: switch heavy industry from coal to gas or move it inland. (A third option – shut it down – is already being employed in some cases where there’s overcapacity and the politics are manageable.) Moving industry can entail political and economic problems; in particular, without adequate infrastructure, it can become unmanageably expensive to move industrial products from inland to places where they’re used. Nonetheless, industry will often move. So I was encouraged to hear optimism that even relocated industry would become more efficient, and often switch fuels, at least partly cleaning up. This all leaves one very large question: where will China get its gas from? Some will be imported – news last week that China and Russia have signed a massive gas supply deal may be at best mixed news from a geopolitical perspective, but it augurs well for climate change. In particular, it suggests that Chinese wariness about energy security is increasingly being outweighed by worries about air pollution, a theme that I also heard frequently. (Of course, there were other factors driving the China-Russia deal too.) Other gas will be domestic. The massive unknown here is how much of this domestic gas will be conventional or shale gas and how much will be synthetic gas ("syngas") produced from coal. The first two are good for climate change; syngas, in contrast, is not. Alas, on that last question, the people I talked to were all over the map, with estimates of anywhere from one to one-hundred billion cubic meters a year of syngas in the next decade. That – along with the more basic question of how well China is able to execute on its strategy – will determine how much Chinese efforts to combat air pollution translate into leverage on climate change. I’m not ready yet to place my bet alongside the climate researcher who now believes that Chinese carbon emissions will peak as a byproduct of efforts to fight local air pollution. But the fact that such a prospect can even be taken seriously is welcome news.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Dutch Court Finds for Shell in Niger Delta Pollution Case
    Environmental degradation associated with the petroleum industry in the Niger Delta impacts directly on the livelihoods of indigenous farmers and fishermen. Environmental issues were an important basis for popular support, or at least acquiescence, for the low level insurgency carried out against the federal and state governments by the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) between 2004 and 2007, with sporadic activities continuing into the present. In part because it has operated in Nigeria for more than fifty years, and because its operations have been mostly on land, the multinational oil giant Shell is often the focus of local and international environmentalist ire. According to the Nigerian press, the director of the Dutch branch of Friends of the Earth, Geert Ritsema, claims Shell should be held responsible for pollution in the Niger Delta region: “The pipeline network of Shell in Nigeria is in a very poor state.” He said that Shell has spilled twice as much oil over the years as the amount leaked during the British Petroleum disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Shell and other big oil companies respond that the spills are caused by sabotage, oil theft, and illegal refiners, and that when spills occur, they are cleaned up to the satisfaction of the Nigerian federal government. Nigeria’s oil belongs to the Nigerian state, but most of the oil is produced by private oil companies, such as Shell, in partnership or by agreement with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, a government-owned entity. Most of the profits go to the Nigerian state. In part because of this close relationship between the oil industry and the state, international environmentalists seek to try pollution cases in European or American courts rather than Nigerian. Accordingly, four Nigerian farmers, with the support of the Dutch non-governmental organization Friends of the Earth, sued Royal Dutch Shell in the Dutch District Court of The Hague for four oil spills between 2004 and 2009. The case was watched closely in Nigeria and by the international environmental community. On January 30, 2013, the court ruled that the oil spills were, indeed, caused by sabotage, that Royal Dutch Shell is not liable. It dismissed the claims of the Friends of the Earth. The court did find that the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC), a Nigerian subsidiary, could have prevented the sabotage in one case by plugging the well. The Court acknowledged the SPDC subsequently contained the leak. Nevertheless, legal proceedings continue against SPDC with the possibility of damages compensation to one farmer. This Dutch court ruling would appear to support the argument that much of the Niger Delta pollution is, indeed, caused by criminal activity carried out by local actors. In what may be an example of making lemonade out of lemons, Evert Hassink,a spokesman for Friends of the Earth expressed disappointment in the verdict which he described as “mixed” but observed that “we’ve succeeded in establishing the principle of going to court in the Netherlands or Europe because of what happened in another country.” The Nigerian media quotes Wale Fapohunda, a commissioner with the National Human Rights Commission, as saying the fact the case was filed in The Hague shows a lack of faith in the corrupt Nigerian judicial system. Lawrence Quaker of Human Rights Law Services in Lagos, said Nigerians are seeking international justice because of the failure of Nigeria’s judiciary. He observed that former Delta State Governor James Ibori was convicted in a UK court of stealing U.S. $77 million in public funds. In Nigeria, he had been found not guilty. Quaker is quoted as saying “It shows that the judiciary abroad is not biased and we can take cases against companies to their motherland for adjudication and get a fair hearing.”
  • South Korea
    Three Hurdles for Emissions Trading Scheme
    Introduction After months of roadblocks that seemed to signal the demise of South Korea's proposed emissions trading scheme (ETS), the South Korean parliament passed legislation establishing an ETS on May 2, 2012, during the final plenary session of the eighteenth National Assembly. South Korea is now on track to set a double precedent: creating the first nationwide greenhouse gas ETS in a developing country and being the first in Asia to do so. The ETS is expected to take effect in 2015. Emissions trading is one of many policies that fall under President Lee Myung-bak's "Green Growth Strategy," a signature initiative of his administration aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions and creating new engines of economic growth through investments in clean energy technology. In November 2009, President Lee announced a voluntary emissions reduction target for Korea of 30 percent below the expected level by 2020—a significant move for a country that is classified as a non–Annex I (developing) country under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and has no obligations under global treaties to reduce its emissions. This is a prime example of what President Lee has called a "me first" attitude toward climate change, the idea that countries must act to mitigate climate change without waiting for others to act first. In order to be successful, the ETS will have to clear at least three hurdles on the road to implementation: a presidential decree process during which industrial interests could try to weaken the scheme, a bureaucratic turf battle over which ministry will run the scheme, and domestic political changes that could affect the ETS. Background: The Road to Passage During a tortuous journey to passage, the ETS bill gained broad support among lawmakers and the grudging acceptance of some in the industrial sector after the government agreed to delay the implementation of the scheme until 2015 and increase the number of emissions allowances that would be given away for free. But the ETS bill was set aside when bitter divisions over the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement roiled the National Assembly and froze action on other legislation in November 2011. Then, early in 2012, the controversial issue of whether to add one seat to the 299-seat National Assembly overtook the parliamentary agenda and stalled the ETS bill's momentum just as lawmakers were moving into full election mode. As recently as April, the conventional wisdom was that the clock had all but run out on passing the ETS in 2012. The National Assembly had already missed President Lee's 2011 year-end deadline for approving ETS legislation. As the April 11 parliamentary elections neared, when all seats in the unicameral National Assembly were in contest, the odds of ETS becoming law narrowed to near zero. The parliamentary elections commanded attention as President Lee's majority Saenuri Party sought to fend off the possibility that an alliance of two liberal opposition parties could win a majority and take control of the National Assembly. The Saenuri Party won a slim majority in the April election by securing 152 seats. The ETS bill then became one of sixty bills the eighteenth National Assembly approved at the last possible opportunity. The ETS was not a campaign issue and has not resonated strongly with the public. "The general public does not see their involvement in ETS," Chung Suh-yong, a professor at Korea University, said in an interview.[1] In fact, ETS seems to have attracted more enthusiastic headlines around the world than it has in Korea. Australian newspapers quoted Australian government ministers lauding the news from Korea. Media reports from New Zealand have highlighted possibilities for linking Korea's ETS with New Zealand's. European news sources have praised Korea for seeking to emulate the European Union's emissions trading scheme. Yet some Korean media reports covering the National Assembly's last plenary session did not even mention the ETS. The Legislation According to Chung, the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) has served as a model for Korea.[2] The EU ETS covers eleven thousand energy and industrial installations that must meet emission reduction targets. Based on the principle of "cap and trade"—under which a cap is set on the aggregate amount of emissions allowed by participating firms—firms receive emissions allowances within that cap that they can buy or sell as needed. Emissions trading is premised on the idea that different firms face different costs in reducing their emissions. Trading on these differences makes the market for emissions allowances work and ensures that emissions are cut where it is least expensive to do so. As economist Erik Haites has written, emissions trading provides "an economic incentive to sources with low-cost emission reduction opportunities to implement larger reductions and sources facing high-cost emission reductions to buy surplus allowances or credits from low-cost sources."[3] He argues that this incentive allows an aggregate level of emissions reduction from a group of specific sources to be achieved at a lower cost than simply mandating this same level of emissions reduction. Haites goes on to say that "typically, the larger the number of participants, the greater the diversity in compliance costs and the larger the potential cost savings."[4] This is where South Korea runs into trouble. Commenting on South Korea's ETS legislation in an interview, Chung said, "Size matters."[5] The interconnected nature of Korean industry means that the market for tradable permits could be too small to work effectively. As described in an essay by Karl Moskowitz, South Korea's chaebol system of family-run conglomerates results in an "extremely high level of industrial asset concentration and control of diverse enterprises."[6] This means that what looks like a large number of firms on paper is effectively a much smaller number for the purposes of domestic emissions trading. The number of participants in an ETS scheme in South Korea would be small—dramatically smaller than the eleven thousand participating in the EU ETS. "It is not wise for Korea just to copy the system of the EU ETS without making a frank assessment," Chung argues, adding that further study is needed to determine whether the EU ETS can be a model for Korea.[7] Three Hurdles for ETS The National Assembly's passage of the ETS was only the first step in bringing the scheme to life. That action kicked off the process of forming a presidential decree, which will spell out in detail how the scheme will work. Numerous press reports have indicated that the legislation does not specify which firms would be covered, where permits would be traded, or how they would be priced.[8] The Lee administration will seek public input from industry and other interested parties as it determines these details through the presidential decree, touching off a second debate over the ETS. In order to be effective, the ETS will have to survive the influence of industry critics who could try to shape the scheme's details in order to mitigate its impact on their businesses. This is the first, and perhaps most significant, of the hurdles that the ETS will have to overcome. Industry opposition to the ETS remains significant in South Korea. The Korean Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI), a major business lobby, has been a consistent and vocal critic of the legislation. At a news conference in Seoul last year, KCCI executive vice chairman Lee Dong-keun summed up the industry position by saying, "forcing firms to buy carbon permits to cover their emissions output will surely bring competitive disadvantage to our industrial edge."[9] Government studies lend some credence to this view. The state-owned Korea Energy Management Corporation has calculated that implementation of an ETS could impose an additional cost of 5.6 trillion won ($5 billion in U.S. dollars) on Korean industry.[10] In addition, a recent study by the Korea Energy Economics Institute calculated South Korean gross domestic product (GDP) losses under various emissions-reduction policy scenarios.[11] The study found the steepest GDP losses under a scenario where no new clean energy technologies were implemented and the smallest GDP losses when the government invested revenues raised from the ETS, or from a supplementary carbon tax, into clean energy technology research and development. An important point of the study is that even with R&D investment, GDP will not begin to grow until 2043. That is a long time for businesses to face additional costs under an ETS. During interviews conducted in Seoul last year, sources indicated that Korean industry was willing to accept an ETS until it became clear that the United States and Japan had abandoned or shelved their own efforts to institute emissions trading. It seems that the industrial sector has not bought into President Lee's "me first" paradigm, but rather into a "me first" strategy that recognizes its own business interests as foremost. A second hurdle for Korea's ETS will be a bureaucratic turf battle, already under way, over which ministry will run the scheme. Under President Lee, the Ministry of Environment has maneuvered itself into a position where it would oversee emissions trading, an endeavor that the Ministry of Knowledge Economy (South Korea's equivalent to the U.S. Department of Energy) believes should be under its purview. According to the Korea Herald, the Ministry of Environment opposes plans by the Ministry of Knowledge Economy to launch a pilot carbon trading program this summer that would be similar to the one the Environment Ministry is already running.[12] "I think two or three government agencies are heading toward serious battle on this issue," Chung said.[13] Finally, there is the possibility that a future parliament could change the ETS. Three political factors are worth considering. First, only half of the National Assembly's parliamentarians (151 out of 299) voted on the ETS bill on May 2. The bill passed overwhelmingly among those who voted (148 to 3), but this outcome may not represent a strong mandate given that half the parliament did not participate in the vote. Second, the new National Assembly is one in which almost half of all lawmakers (about 140) are newly elected.[14] It is unclear where they may stand on the ETS. Third, South Koreans will elect a new president in December. The winner of that contest may have different ideas about emissions trading in Korea than does the current administration. Implications Even if South Korea were to succeed in reducing its emissions significantly, would it matter for the climate? Although South Korea registers the fastest-growing emissions among member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the country is still a back-bencher in terms of its contribution to global emissions. According to preliminary estimates from the U.S. Department of Energy's Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, which measures CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion to cement manufacture, South Korea's CO2 emissions reached a record high of 153 million metric tons in 2010, compared with 2.24 billion metric tons in China, and 1.49 billion metric tons in the United States in that same year. Together, China and the United States account for about 41 percent of the global total while South Korea is responsible for only 1.6 percent. Limiting emissions in South Korea would have no appreciable impact on arresting the trajectory of global emissions; that will require action by China and the United States. Why is South Korea willing to do something that it has no obligation to do under global treaties—something that no other developing country has so far stepped up to do? And why is it willing to do something that will have little impact on mitigating climate change? One answer to these questions may have to do with shaping the future playing field of climate change mitigation. By doing more now than global treaties require, South Korea may be securing a better position for itself when it someday moves into the category of developed countries.[15] This could also be one reason why South Korea has championed the idea of a Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action (NAMA) registry, a framework that allows developing countries to undertake voluntary mitigation actions that are recognized internationally and become eligible for financial support from advanced nations. A second answer to these questions has to do with economic self-interest. As Young Soo-gil, chairman of Korea's Presidential Committee on Green Growth, has said, Korea's "push to introduce the carbon trading scheme in 2015 will help the nation develop green industry technologies to reduce energy consumption. It will give momentum for the country to get ahead of other countries in green businesses."[16] Gaining global market share in clean energy technologies has always been an important factor in the government's green growth strategy; the ETS is seen as one more way to advance this effort. Finally, a third lens through which to view South Korea's actions on cutting emissions is that of showing leadership and gaining prestige. Formally adopting a voluntary target and implementing an ETS to achieve it is a prime example of President Lee's "me first" strategy on climate change mitigation. He has also emphasized the public relations benefits of cutting emissions, saying that "our ambitious target will help enhance the country's international status and national pride."[17] The virtue of becoming the first non–Annex I country to implement emissions trading sometimes seems like an end in itself, one that fits into Korea's overall strategy of enhancing its image on the international stage. This helps explain what can seem like inconsistent actions by South Korea. For example, during President Lee's visit to Turkey in February, South Korean firms signed a memorandum of understanding with a Turkish electricity firm on a $2 billion project to build a coal-fired power plant.[18] Pushing emissions reduction at home while seeking contracts abroad to build coal-fired power plants are ostensibly contradictory actions, but both contribute to South Korea's overarching goal of raising its international profile. The Lee administration's push for an ETS in South Korea must be understood within this context. President Lee has also spoken often of Korea's role as a bridge between developed and developing countries on the issue of tackling climate change, an idea that others have picked up on as well. As reported in the Korea Times last November, the outgoing British ambassador in Seoul, Martin Uden, urged South Korea to pass the ETS bill, saying during a press briefing, "We need Korea to pass it [ETS legislation] so countries like Korea will feel they can do something now regardless of moves by other nations."[19] But would other countries follow the leader or take a free ride? As a greater share of the emissions reduction burden is borne by certain countries, a lesser share remains for other countries to take up. After South Korea's implementation of an ETS, some developing countries could calculate that there is less reason for them to do so, not more. While some analysts suggest that Korea's move to begin emissions trading will embolden China's efforts to begin a pilot carbon trading scheme in seven major cities and provinces, this Chinese project was in progress long before the Korean parliament adopted the ETS. Moreover, an ETS in South Korea in the absence of a successor treaty to the Kyoto Protocol may not be enough to convince other countries to follow South Korea's lead. Acknowledging this possibility in a December interview on the sidelines of global climate talks in Durban, South Africa, former South Korean prime minister and current chairman of the Global Green Growth Institute Han Seung-soo said that the ETS depended on the success of the climate negotiations: "If you don't have [the] Kyoto mechanism in operation, then many countries will be very reluctant to go on for this system."[20] The Kyoto Protocol remains in force, but a successor treaty that requires action by developed and developing countries alike has yet to be negotiated. Conclusion The spirit of "me first" may yet win the day in Korea; whether it prevails in the way President Lee intended remains to be seen. Each of the three hurdles involves a narrower version of "me first" that could threaten the overall goal of an effective ETS in Korea: industry critics protecting economic interests, government ministries seeking to maximize their own role in the ETS, and untested parliamentarians who may choose to weigh in on the ETS in ways yet to be seen. The second debate over ETS that is now unfolding will answer these questions. Endnotes ^ Interview with author, January 21, 2012. ^ Interview with author, March 6, 2012. ^ Erik Haites, "Conclusion: Mechanisms, Linkages and the Direction of the Future Climate Regime," in Farhana Yamin, ed., Climate Change and Carbon Markets: A Handbook of Emissions Reduction Mechanisms (London: Earthscan, 2005), p. 328. ^ Haites, "Conclusion," p. 329. ^ Interview with author, March 6, 2012. ^ Karl Moskowitz, "Ownership and Management of Korean Firms," in Kae H. Chung and Hak Chong Lee, eds., Korean Management Dynamics (New York: Praeger, 1989), p. 77. ^ Interview with author, March 6, 2012. ^ Cho Meeyoung, "S. Korean parliament delays emission bill vote again," Reuters, February 15, 2012, http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/16/us-korea-carbon-idUSTRE81F0AP…. ^ Kim Yoo-chul, "Business up in arms over cap and trade market," Korea Times, February 8, 2011, http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/biz/2011/12/123_80987.html. ^ Sangim Han, "South Korea Plans Carbon Law as Companies Oppose $5 Billion Cost," Bloomberg, September 21, 2011, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-09-22/south-korea-plans-carbon-law-as-companies-oppose-5-billion-cost.html. ^ J. G. Oh, "A Study on Strategies for Green Growth in Energy Sector in Relation to the Response to Climate Change: An Analysis on Policy Options for Green Growth," Korea Energy Economics Institute, December 31, 2011. ^ Lee Sun-young, "Challenges ahead for carbon trade scheme," Korea Herald, May 14, 2012. ^ Interview with author, March 6, 2012. ^ Korea Times, "New National Assembly," May 29, 2012. ^ See http://asiafoundation.org/resources/pdfs/ODonnellGreenGrowth.pdf. ^ Lee Tae-hoon, "Korea to lead global green growth endeavor," Korea Times, May 10, 2012. ^ Agence France Presse, "South Korea Adopts Ambitious Targets for Emissions Cuts," November 19, 2009. ^ Chang Jae-soon, "Lee secures crude supplies, economic deals from Middle East," Yonhap, February 10, 2012, http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2012/02/10/91/0301000000AEN20120210000700315F.HTML. ^ Philip Iglauer, "Amb. Uden urges Korea to pass climate bill," Korea Times, November 13, 2011. ^ Climate Connect interview, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTBJiiBgY1Q.
  • Cuba
    Addressing the Risk of a Cuban Oil Spill
    The imminent drilling of Cuba's first offshore oil well raises the prospect of a large-scale oil spill in Cuban waters washing onto U.S. shores. Washington should anticipate this possibility by implementing policies that would help both countries' governments stem and clean up an oil spill effectively. These policies should ensure that both the U.S. government and the domestic oil industry are operationally and financially ready to deal with any spill that threatens U.S. waters. These policies should be as minimally disruptive as possible to the country's broader Cuba strategy. The Problem A Chinese-built semisubmersible oil rig leased by Repsol, a Spanish oil company, arrived in Cuban waters in January 2012 to drill Cuba's first exploratory offshore oil well. Early estimates suggest that Cuban offshore oil and natural gas reserves are substantial—somewhere between five billion and twenty billion barrels of oil and upward of eight billion cubic feet of natural gas. Although the United States typically welcomes greater volumes of crude oil coming from countries that are not members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a surge in Cuban oil production would complicate the United States' decades-old effort to economically isolate the Castro regime. Deepwater drilling off the Cuban coast also poses a threat to the United States. The exploratory well is seventy miles off the Florida coast and lies at a depth of 5,800 feet. The failed Macondo well that triggered the calamitous Deepwater Horizon oil spill in April 2010 had broadly similar features, situated forty-eight miles from shore and approximately five thousand feet below sea level. A spill off Florida's coast could ravage the state's $57 billion per year tourism industry. Washington cannot count on the technical know-how of Cuba's unseasoned oil industry to address a spill on its own. Oil industry experts doubt that it has a strong understanding of how to prevent an offshore oil spill or stem a deep-water well blowout. Moreover, the site where the first wells will be drilled is a tough one for even seasoned response teams to operate in. Unlike the calm Gulf of Mexico, the surface currents in the area where Repsol will be drilling move at a brisk three to four knots, which would bring oil from Cuba's offshore wells to the Florida coast within six to ten days. Skimming or burning the oil may not be feasible in such fast-moving water. The most, and possibly only, effective method to respond to a spill would be surface and subsurface dispersants. If dispersants are not applied close to the source within four days after a spill, uncontained oil cannot be dispersed, burnt, or skimmed, which would render standard response technologies like containment booms ineffective. Repsol has been forthcoming in disclosing its spill response plans to U.S. authorities and allowing them to inspect the drilling rig, but the Russian and Chinese companies that are already negotiating with Cuba to lease acreage might not be as cooperative. Had Repsol not volunteered to have the Cuba-bound drilling rig examined by the U.S. Coast Guard and Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement to certify that it met international standards, Washington would have had little legal recourse. The complexity of U.S.-Cuba relations since the 1962 trade embargo complicates even limited efforts to put in place a spill response plan. Under U.S. law and with few exceptions, American companies cannot assist the Cuban government or provide equipment to foreign companies operating in Cuban territory. Shortfalls in U.S. federal regulations governing commercial liability for oil spills pose a further problem. The Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA 90) does not protect U.S. citizens and property against damages stemming from a blown-out wellhead outside of U.S. territory. In the case of Deepwater Horizon, BP was liable despite being a foreign company because it was operating within the United States. Were any of the wells that Repsol drills to go haywire, the cost of funding a response would fall to the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (OSLTF), which is woefully undercapitalized. OPA 90 limits the OSLTF from paying out more than $50 million in a fiscal year on oil removal costs, subject to a few exceptions, and requires congressional appropriation to pay out more than $150 million. The Way Forward As a first step, the United States should discuss contingency planning for a Cuban oil spill at the regular multiparty talks it holds with Mexico, the Bahamas, Cuba, and others per the Cartagena Convention. The Caribbean Island Oil Pollution Response and Cooperation Plan provides an operational framework under which the United States and Cuba can jointly develop systems for identifying and reporting an oil spill, implement a means of restricting the spread of oil, and identify resources to respond to a spill. Washington should also instruct the U.S. Coast Guard to conduct basic spill response coordination with its counterparts in Cuba. The United States already has operational agreements in place with Mexico, Canada, and several countries in the Caribbean that call for routine exercises, emergency response coordination, and communication protocols. It should strike an agreement with Cuba that is substantively similar but narrower in scope, limited to basic spill-oriented advance coordination and communication. Before that step can be taken, U.S. lawmakers may need to amend the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 to allow for limited, spill-related coordination and communication with the Cuban government. Next, President Barack Obama should issue an export-only industry-wide general license for oil spill response in Cuban waters, effective immediately. Issuing that license does not require congressional authorization. The license should allow offshore oil companies to do vital spill response work in Cuban territory, such as capping a well or drilling a relief well. Oil service companies, such as Halliburton, should be included in the authorization. Finally, Congress should alter existing oil spill compensation policy. Lawmakers should amend OPA 90 to ensure there is a responsible party for oil spills from a foreign offshore unit that pollutes or threatens to pollute U.S. waters, like there is for vessels. Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Congressman David Rivera (R-FL) have sponsored such legislation. Lawmakers should eliminate the requirement for the Coast Guard to obtain congressional approval on expenditures above $150 million for spills of national significance (as defined by the National Response Plan). And President Obama should appoint a commission to determine the appropriate limit of liability cap under OPA 90, balancing the need to compensate victims with the desire to retain strict liability for polluters. There are two other, less essential measures U.S. lawmakers may consider that would enable the country to respond more adeptly to a spill. Installing an early-response system based on acoustic, geophysical, or other technologies in the Straits of Florida would immediately alert the U.S. Coast Guard about a well blowout or other unusual activity. The U.S. Department of Energy should find out from Repsol about the characteristics of Cuban crude oil, which would help U.S. authorities predict how the oil would spread in the case of a well blowout. Defending U.S. Interests An oil well blowout in Cuban waters would almost certainly require a U.S. response. Without changes in current U.S. law, however, that response would undoubtedly come far more slowly than is desirable. The Coast Guard would be barred from deploying highly experienced manpower, specially designed booms, skimming equipment and vessels, and dispersants. U.S. offshore gas and oil companies would also be barred from using well-capping stacks, remotely operated submersibles, and other vital technologies. Although a handful of U.S. spill responders hold licenses to work with Repsol, their licenses do not extend to well capping or relief drilling. The result of a slow response to a Cuban oil spill would be greater, perhaps catastrophic, economic and environmental damage to Florida and the Southeast. Efforts to rewrite current law and policy toward Cuba, and encouraging cooperation with its government, could antagonize groups opposed to improved relations with the Castro regime. They might protest any decision allowing U.S. federal agencies to assist Cuba or letting U.S. companies operate in Cuban territory. However, taking sensible steps to prepare for a potential accident at an oil well in Cuban waters would not break new ground or materially alter broader U.S. policy toward Cuba. For years, Washington has worked with Havana on issues of mutual concern. The United States routinely coordinates with Cuba on search and rescue operations in the Straits of Florida as well as to combat illicit drug trafficking and migrant smuggling. During the hurricane season, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) provides Cuba with information on Caribbean storms. The recommendations proposed here are narrowly tailored to the specific challenges that a Cuban oil spill poses to the United States. They would not help the Cuban economy or military. What they would do is protect U.S. territory and property from a potential danger emanating from Cuba. Cuba will drill for oil in its territorial waters with or without the blessing of the United States. Defending against a potential oil spill requires a modicum of advance coordination and preparation with the Cuban government, which need not go beyond spill-related matters. Without taking these precautions, the United States risks a second Deepwater Horizon, this time from Cuba.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Oil Spills in the Niger Delta: It’s a Matter of Political Will
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFB_99rtYn8 At about sixteen minutes into this video, the al-Jazeera film crew tour a polluted creek and visit an illegal refinery in Bodo. I have traveled in the Niger Delta and sometimes thought I had gone to hell: the Satanic glow at twilight from the ubiquitous gas flaring, the pervasive rotten-eggs stench of sulfur, and even the translucent glow of the polluted waters. Environmental degradation is an important driver of an ongoing, low-level insurrection by people dependent on various forms of aquaculture, which often involves sabotaging oil facilities that only makes the pollution worse. A 2006 assessment (Doc) by the Nigeria Federal Ministry of the Environment, assisted by the UK World Wildlife Federation and other NGOs, estimated that oil spilled in the Niger Delta over the past fifty years was about fifty times the volume spilled by the Exxon Valdez in Alaska in 1989. More recently, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has released a study evaluating oil pollution in a specific region, Ogoniland, with scientific rigor. The report makes specific recommendations with the goal of a thoroughgoing clean-up. Deidre LaPin provides an excellent analysis of the background to the report and a quick summary of its findings and its conclusions here. It is easy to blame the international oil companies for degradation of the Niger Delta environment, all the more so when Exxon is reporting that its profits world-wide increased by 69 percent during this year’s first quarter while Shell’s are up 30 percent. But, the real story does not lend itself to a morality tale. “Bush refining” (illegal mom-and-pop refining operations) supplied by “bunkering” (oil theft by puncturing pipelines) substantially contributes to the pollution, as the UNEP study acknowledges. More importantly, the Nigerian government is deeply involved with all elements of Delta oil and gas production through the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), and all oil and gas is the property of the Nigerian state, and provides the state with about 65 percent of its total revenue and 95 percent of export earnings. NNPC owns a majority interest in the assets operated by Shell under a joint operating agreement, for example. Such partnership agreements require NNPC to fund its share of petroleum production, including pollution abatement efforts, making the federal government at least partially complicit in the degradation of the Delta environment. But the Abuja government too often fails to appropriate the funds necessary for the NNPC to fulfill its partnership obligations because of politicians’ other priorities. Cleaning up the Niger Delta will be expensive, and a big share of the cost will fall to the Nigerian state. Meeting those costs will require a rethink of how Nigeria spends its oil revenue with implications for the country’s entire political economy. Changes of the necessary magnitude will require enormous political will.
  • Japan
    How to Reshape Post-Crisis Japan
    Japan’s ability to rebound from its triple disaster in March will require more than just rebuilding; it will demand restructuring in areas from energy and farm policy to decentralization of power, write Brian P. Klein and CFR’s David S. Abraham.
  • Japan
    Japan’s Health Concerns
    In the aftermath of Japan’s earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear crisis, Council on Foreign Relations Senior Fellow for Global Health Laurie Garrett discusses the health concerns the country faces.
  • United Kingdom
    Russell C. Leffingwell Lecture: The Diplomacy of Climate Change
    Play
    CHRISTINE TODD WHITMAN: Good morning, everyone. In the interest of keeping to the council's usual discipline, we will start now in order to get everybody out by 9:00. I'd like to remind everybody and ask you: Please turn off totally your BlackBerries and cell phones, just because they might interfere with the -- with the microphone. And for this breakfast we are on the record, so one of the things that the mikes do obviously is for recording. I want to start it, though, by saying this is the Russell C. Leffingwell Lecture, and I want to thank the Leffingwell Pulling family, several of whom are here today -- not the whole, by any means; I know the family well enough to be able to say that with some certainty. But I do want to thank Tom Leffingwell Pulling and his son Edward Leffingwell Pulling for ensuring that this series can continue in the way that it has. So thank you, Tommy, and thank you to all Pullings and Leffingwells. We really appreciate it. This is the -- this is an -- a -- an on-the-record session. I am not going to spend a lot of time introducing our guest, because you all have a copy of his resume, but we are extremely pleased and lucky to have the honorable -- Right Honorable William Hague, who's the secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs for the United Kingdom and a member of Parliament, someone who has -- he's been here for the week, or longer than a week. He's done a series of meetings. We are very fortunate to have him here towards the end of his stay to talk about, today, a subject specifically in his talk, one that is of interest to the United States, and we may be seen as being a little bit behind the times on it, which is the issue of climate change. But I would welcome the minister to come forward, the secretary, and to give his remarks, and then he will take -- as is usual council practice, we will have a little bit of dialogue between the two of us and then we will open it up to questions. But I assure you we will get everyone out on time at 9. Mr. Hague? (Applause.) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS WILLIAM HAGUE: Well, thank you very much, Governor Whitman. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I'm delighted to be here at the Council on Foreign Relations. Thank you very much for the invitation and for the punctuality with which you run all these things. It reminds me of when I first went to speak to the farming community in my own district. And they had quite a long meeting: They did a lot of business; they looked at all their accounts; they had reports on what they'd done all year. And then they said, Mr. Hague, do you want to speak to us now? And I said, well, how long do you want me to speak for? And they said, you can speak for as long as you'd like, but in four minutes' time we're leaving. (Laughter.) And that was a good discipline on how to give a short speech. I'm -- I want to talk today about why I believe that we as foreign-policy practitioners need to up our game in building a credible and effective response to climate change. But let me also (set ?) that when we come to the question-and-answer, I'm happy to answer questions about any other aspect of foreign policy. We've been dealing a lot over the last week in all the discussions here with Yemen, on which we as the United Kingdom have been particularly focused; with Pakistan; Middle East peace process, of course, with which we're preoccupied somewhat today; with Iran -- I had my first meeting with the Iranian foreign minister a few days ago, which was interesting; and with the western Balkans -- in recent times they've been very, very active. And we are engaged in intensifying our relations with the emerging economies around the world. So there's a lot of other -- of other subjects to discuss on foreign policy, and I'm happy to answer questions about those subjects as well. But I particularly wanted to make the point to this audience and to circulate to a wider audience certain points about climate change this morning, which is perhaps the 21st century's biggest foreign- policy challenge, along with preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. I believe those two threats over the longer term are the biggest threats to the peace and security of the world. A world that is failing to respond to climate change is one in which the values embodied in the United Nations will not be met, and it's a world in which competition and conflict would win out over collaboration. We're at a very crucial point in the global debate on this subject. Many people are questioning, in the wake of Copenhagen, whether we should continue to seek a response to climate change through the U.N. and whether we can ever hope to deal with this enormous challenge. And I will first argue today that an effective response to climate change underpins our security and prosperity; second, that our response should be to strive for a binding global deal, whatever the setbacks; and third, I will set out why effective deployment of foreign policy assets is crucial to mobilizing the political will needed if we're going to shape an effective response. Now, Ban Ki-moon is right to have made climate change his top priority. Two weeks ago, I was talking about Britain's values in a networked world. I said then that a successful response to climate change must be a central objective of British foreign policy. And I said this not only because I believe action against climate change is in line with a values-based foreign policy, but because it underpins our prosperity and security. You can't have food, water or energy security without climate security; they are interconnected and inseparable. They form four resource pillars on which global security, prosperity and equity stand. Each depends on the other. Plentiful, affordable food requires reliable and affordable access to water and energy. Increasing dependence on coal, oil and gas threatens climate security, increasing the severity of floods and droughts, damaging food production, exacerbating the loss of biodiversity, and in countries that rely on hydropower, undermining energy security through the impact on the availability of water. As the world becomes more networked, the impact of climate change in one country or region will affect the prosperity and security of others around the world. No one can have failed to be appalled by the devastating floods in Pakistan. They overwhelmed the capacity of government to respond and opened political space for extremists. While Pakistan has borne the brunt of the human impact, China too has been hit on a vast scale by a seemingly endless sequence of droughts, floods and deadly mudslides. The Russian drought last month damaged the wheat harvest, leading to an export ban. World prices surged, hitting the poorest hardest, and sparking riots over bread prices in far away Mozambique. While no one weather event can ever be linked with certainty to climate change, the broad patterns of abnormality seen this year are consistent with climate-change models. They provide an illustration of the events we will be encountering increasingly in the future. So the clock is ticking, and the time to act is now. We must all take responsibility for this threat and take robust action. But we must also be clear-headed about the difficulties of reaching agreement and not lose heart when the going gets tough. The post-war leaders set up the United Nations in the aftermath of conflagration. They saw the pressing need for global solutions to global problems: cooperation not conflict, through frameworks and institutions embedded in the rule of law, and an international system that is fair and offers everyone a realistic prospect of security and prosperity. Failure to respond to climate change is inimical to all these values, undermining trust between nations, intensifying competition for resources, and shrinking the political space available for cooperation. It is an affront to fairness, since it puts the greatest burden on those who have done least to cause the problem and are least able to deal with its consequences. It is incompatible with the values and aspirations that the U.N. embodies. And it's incompatible with the values and aspirations of British foreign policy. For more than 20 years, we've been striving to build an effective international response to climate change. But we have lacked the collective ambition required. We need to shift investment urgently from high-carbon "business as usual" to the low-carbon economy. This means building an essentially decarbonized global economy by mid- century. At the same time, we must ensure development is climate resilient; otherwise, the changes in climate that are already unavoidable will block the path for hundreds of millions of people from poverty to prosperity. These changes also threaten to sweep away the investments in development we have made, and just as the bridges and schools in Pakistan were swept away. To drive that shift in investment from low to high carbon, we need a global climate change deal under the United Nations. Now, some have argued that we should abandon hope of doing so. They say Copenhagen proved it's all too difficult; we should focus instead on less inclusive and less demanding responses, such as coalitions of the willing. But we believe this would be a strategic error. It mistakes the nature of the task, which is to expand the realm of the possible, not to lower our ambition by accepting its current limits. And we must recognize this at Cancun. One thing Copenhagen did give us was a set of political commitments, captured in the Copenhagen Accord, on which we can build. More than 120 countries have now associated themselves with that accord, and that represents a broad and growing consensus. We now need to ensure that we live up to the commitments we made to each other in the accord, and reach out even more widely. Copenhagen, despite those accords, was a strategic setback, but it was not by any means the end of the road. We need to be clear why it failed to live up to high expectations and why it did not deliver a legally binding deal. Many people say that it failed because of process: The diplomats and the politicians had created a negotiation that was too difficult and too complex. But this misses the point. International treaties are an outcome, not an input, of political bargains. If you've made the political commitment to deliver, you can make the process work to deliver. The real reason Copenhagen did not deliver on high expectations was a lack of political will. Many in developing countries saw a gap between the words and the deeds of the industrialized economies. They questioned whether we really believed our own rhetoric. And to answer those questions, we each need to start at home. That is why the coalition government to which I belong has committed itself to being the greenest government ever in the United Kingdom, and why, with others in Europe, we are calling on the European Union to commit to a 30-percent cut in emissions by 2020 without waiting for the rest of the world to act. The UK is already the world leader in offshore wind, with more projects installed, in planning and in construction than any other country in the world. We're undertaking the most radical transformation of our electricity sector ever. We aim to provide over 30 percent of our domestic electricity from renewables by 2020. We have committed to build no new coal-fired power stations without carbon capture and storage technology, and we've announced our intention to continue the demonstration projects of that. And because it's imperative that foreign and domestic policies are mutually reinforcing, we must ensure that our approach is coherent. Now, that's one reason we have established the new British National Security Council: to ensure this happens across the full range of issues, including climate change. And that's why I work hand in glove with Chris Huhne, the British Energy and Climate Change secretary, and Andrew Mitchell, the International Development secretary, to ensure that our domestic action reflects our level of international ambition. But we won't succeed, of course, if we act alone. We must aim for a framework that is global and binding. It needs to be global because climate change affects everyone. Only a response that allows everyone a voice will generate a sense of common purpose and legitimacy. Only a response that is binding will convince investors that we intend to keep the promises we make to each other. Businesses need clear political signals, so let's show them an unequivocal green light. We are now a few weeks away from the 16th Conference of Parties on Climate Change in Cancun. And I commend the consultative and collaborative approach Mexico has taken ahead of this meeting. Thanks to their determination and foresight, we have a chance in Cancun to regain momentum and make progress on key issues such as forests, technology, finance and transparency of commitments. Cancun will -- may not get us all the way to a full agreement, but it can put us back on track to one. That said, the negotiations can't succeed inside a bubble. The negotiators in the U.N. process can't themselves build political will. They have to operate on the basis of current political realities in the countries they represent. And it's those realities that limit the ambition that we can set in the -- in such negotiations, and it's those realities that we now need to shift. There is no global consensus on what climate change puts at risk, geopolitically and for the global economy, and thus on the scale and urgency of the response we need. We must build a global consensus if we are to guarantee our citizens security and prosperity. That is a job for foreign policy. A fundamental purpose here for foreign policy is to shift the political debate, to create the political space for leaders and negotiators to reach agreement. We didn't get that right before Copenhagen, and we must get it right now. So we urgently need to mobilize foreign ministers and the diplomats they lead, as well as institutions such as the Council on Foreign Relations, to put climate change at the heart of foreign- policy thinking. When I became foreign secretary in May, I said the core goals of our foreign policy were to guarantee Britain's security and prosperity. Robust global action on climate change is essential to that agenda. That is why the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office, under my leadership, is a vocal advocate for climate diplomacy. All British ambassadors carry the argument for a global low-carbon transition in their breast pocket or in their handbag. Climate change is part of their daily vocabulary, alongside the traditional themes of foreign policy. And they're supported by our unique network of climate attaches throughout the world. The core assets of foreign policy are its networks and its convening power. Foreign policy can build political impulses to overcome barriers between sectors and cultures. In a networked world, diplomacy builds partnerships beyond government. And nowhere are those partnerships more vital than on climate. So we must mobilize all our networks, not just across government but between governments, using organizations such as the Commonwealth as well. We must reach out, beyond, to NGOs, faith groups and businesses. And of all these, perhaps business engagement is the key to making a difference. It's business that will lead low-carbon transition. It's business that best understands the incentives needed to help us all prosper. We must also harness scientific expertise in cutting-edge low- carbon technologies. The scientific community will develop the goods which will power the low-carbon economy and drive global ambition on climate change. And that's why the British government has a science and innovation network, which fosters collaborative research in the U.K. and other countries. Now, what can the U.K. and the European Union do to make that fundamental shift and shape a global consensus on climate change? The most serious problem at Copenhagen, and the strongest brake on political will, was and is a lack of confidence in the low-carbon economy. Too few people in too few countries are yet convinced that a rapid move to low carbon is compatible with economic recovery and growth. They see the short-term economic and domestic stability risks before the opportunities and the longer-term risks of inaction. There should be only one European response to that confidence gap. The EU, in my view, must accelerate its own progress and demonstrate that a low-carbon growth path makes us more competitive. I am convinced this is in the long-term interests of Europe's economy. We have learned painful lessons from the oil price shocks. We must modernize our infrastructure. The opportunities are out there. The global industry in low-carbon and environmental goods and services is already estimated to be worth up to 3.2 trillion pounds a year. Nearly a million British people are now employed in this sector, and that's why we are creating a green investment bank to ensure that we can properly support and develop low-carbon industry. But we need to redouble our efforts, both in the EU (itself ?) and in our engagement with partners. Each of us as member states will be better able to accelerate if we're doing so together as the world's largest single market. And by opening up this effort through partnership with others, we can make it easier for them to accelerate, too. So we'll be at the forefront of pushing for low-carbon modernization of Europe's infrastructure and energy policy. The European Union's budget until 2013 is set out in the current "financial perspective". We will argue -- we will need to agree the financial perspective for the seven years after that, the period including our 2020 climate goals. And it's -- as ever, it's right that the EU budget should reflect the prevailing economic circumstances. It's also right that we direct the budget to today's challenges, not those of yesterday. And that means one that supports the transition to a low-carbon economy. Action in Europe alone will not be enough. We need both the developed and developing world to take action. And this week Guido Westerwelle, the German foreign minister, and I have tasked our teams to come together to shape a coordinated, diplomacy-led effort on climate change, combining the strengths of our respective foreign services. I've just put the case for bringing a new urgency for low-carbon transition within the EU. But together we should carry that urgency in external dialogues, whether they are with the United States, China or India. The transition to low carbon will happen faster and maximize the benefit for all if the United States -- historically the world's largest emitter -- is at the leading edge. I recognize the political challenges that the U.S. administration faces and welcome President Obama's commitment to combat climate change. As he said in his State of the Union speech, "the nation that leads the clean-energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy." Whatever the outcome of the upcoming midterm elections in the U.S., there is scope for political unity around an economic agenda that targets new energy opportunities and new jobs. American business understands this new market and should want to lead it. But to make these new clean-energy investments at the required pace and on a sufficient scale, they need the right incentives. On climate, as in so many areas, the world looks to the US for leadership, because it has the economic clout and diplomatic leverage to shift the global debate. And I look forward to working with the U.S. administration and indeed with the Council on Foreign Relations to raise global ambitions and put us back on the path to sustainable growth. A key challenge for Europe is to build an economic partnership with China that reinforces the steps China is taking towards a low- carbon economy. These steps include its recent announcement of the five provinces and eight cities that have been designated as China's low-carbon pilots. Together these pilots cover 350 million people, so an ambitious approach to these schemes, tenaciously implemented, could provide a critical boost to global confidence in the concept of low- carbon development and help put China on the path to sustainable prosperity. It could also produce huge two-way investment and partnership opportunities. Europe should place itself at the heart of these, working with China to maximize the ambition and the opportunities and to build the shared technology standards that will shape a global low- carbon market. In China's case, low-carbon opportunity is matched by urgent low- carbon need. The pace of growth in China means average Chinese per- capita emissions could soon eclipse those of Europe. So while China has taken some very welcome steps, without a commitment from China to further decisive action, the efforts of others will be in vain. The emerging economies face a dilemma. Often they are the most vulnerable to the direct effects of climate change. But they are concerned that action against climate change will adversely affect their development. The challenge to all countries is to have a high- growth, low-carbon economy. Some, like Brazil, which derives nearly half its energy from clean and renewable resources, are rising to that challenge. India is another, embodying in microcosm the challenge that climate change poses to us all. Threatened by food, water and energy insecurity, India has responded with ambitious plans to generate 20 gigawatts of solar power by 2022. South Africa, a coal-dependent economy, the success of which is so important to growth and prosperity within the continent, has made a significant offer to deviate their emissions from the business-as- usual pathway. The opportunity is for the emerging economies -- for the emerging economies is to make a direct leap to low carbon, avoiding the high- carbon lock-in that we see in the developed world: a new, sustainable pathway for prosperity and security. A global low-carbon economy is not an idealist's pipe dream but a 21st-century realist's imperative. Countries that adapt quickly to a carbon-constrained world will be better able to deliver lasting prosperity for their citizens. As a Permanent Security Council member, I'm determined that the U.K. will play its full part in that, not least by supporting climate finance for the poorest. Collectively, we share a responsibility to those most vulnerable to the impact of climate change. Bangladesh, with its densely populated coastal region, is particularly susceptible to rising sea levels. Glacial melt, sea-level rises and El Nino-type events threaten the lives of millions across South America. And the very existence of many small island states is under threat. We have a shared vision to meet the Millennium Development Goals. But in a world without action on climate change, that vision will remain a dream, and the efforts of the last 10 years would So climate change is one of the gravest threats to our security and prosperity. Unless we take robust and timely action to deal with it, no country will be immune to its effects. However difficult it might seem now, a global deal under the U.N. is the only response to this threat which will create the necessary confidence to drive a low- carbon transition. We must be undaunted by the scale of the challenge. We must continue to strive for agreement. We must not accept that because there is no consensus on a way forward now, that there never will be one. And to change the debate, we must imaginatively deploy all of the foreign policy assets in our armory until we've shaped that global consensus. A successful response to climate change will not only stabilize the climate, but open the way to a future in which we can meet our needs through cooperation, in accordance with the ideals of the United Nations. Failure to do so will enhance competitive tendencies and make the world more dangerous, so this is not actually a hard choice. We have to get this right. If we do, we can still shape our world. And if we don't, the world will determine our destiny for us. Thank you very much indeed for listening. (Applause.) WHITMAN: Well, thank you very much for a really very compelling discussion and for laying out a comprehensive case. I do want to ask you, you mentioned the challenges of meeting actually the current budgets under Kyoto for the countries that have signed the protocol. Looking at the European Union -- and you touched on the fiscal and financial challenges -- how are you going to find, and where -- how are these countries moving toward finding the money necessary to invest in the infrastructure, particularly energy as you touched on, that will really make the most comprehensive difference in the climate change? HAGUE: Well, I think we have to make sure we find the money. And there is scope to leverage an enormous private-sector involvement here. And that is where most of the involvement in our -- most of the investment in our own renewable-energy infrastructure is taking place. You have to create the right incentives for them to do so. The -- but we're used to doing that and tackling such issues. You know, some years ago in Britain, and I think in many other countries, we created a tax differential on unleaded fuel that led to everybody switching over to it, giving people incentives to invest in the right infrastructure, the necessary access to the markets. And sometimes the -- sometimes some level of subsidy and tax concessions and so on helps to bring that about. And so I think that is a very important part of budgetary considerations. And, of course, it can lead over time to substantial savings in many economies, when they have more renewable-energy infrastructure. So looked at in the perspective of 20, 30 years, it's very sensible to make such investments. WHITMAN: I've recognized that. It's not -- we don't always look in 20-, 30-year segments. HAGUE: No, that's very true. WHITMAN: This is the challenge. How do you see -- again, you touched on -- very diplomatically and briefly -- on the United States's role here. But given that there's likely to be a change in the construct of Congress after this election -- and I doubt it is going to be one that is going to have an -- a renewed appetite in climate change, given what I know of some of the races that are out there -- what's that going to do to the impetus in the European Union, in the United Kingdom, to continuing to be at the forefront and making these kinds of very, very substantial investments? HAGUE: Well, it won't change the impetus in the United Kingdom and the European Union. We are determined to go ahead whatever is happening in the rest of the world. Actually, we have passed a climate-change act designed to reduce our emissions in the U.K. by 34 percent by the end of this decade, by 80 percent by the year 2050. We will do that, and we will press our EU colleagues to do the other things I have described -- unilaterally; we will do that irrespective of global deals. And I believe that will give us enormous economic opportunities. And I think that countries that aren't getting in on that will miss out on some of those economic opportunities. So as time goes on, the economic case will be getting more and more compelling -- that each country needs a thriving low-carbon business sector; that there will be billions and tens of billions and potentially hundreds of billions of dollars of exports in this sector. With -- nations that do not get in on that are going to miss out on it. When you look at China doing its low-carbon cities and you look at developments in the Gulf now and Abu Dhabi working on a zero-carbon city, countries that don't get in on this are going to miss out on a lot. And so the (politics ?), as well as the altruistic case, will mount over the coming years for driving a low-carbon economy. But I think there is a strong political case as well. And perhaps in the British Conservative Party, we are maybe -- well, maybe we're not listened to by American politicians. I don't know, but I hope we are. Perhaps we are in one of the strongest positions to influence those on the right in American politics. I know the first time I talked to a Republican audience about climate change, they looked at me as if I'd gone very strange indeed. But there are -- there are leading Republicans who agree with this, who have promoted climate change legislation. And so -- and all parties have to develop their views in the face of the facts and the evidence of the times. So I hope that will happen across American politics. WHITMAN: I'm sure there are a lot of questions out there, but I'd like to ask just one more before I turn it over. You talked about addressing the energy sector and energy issues through the renewables, particularly wind for Great Britain. We know, though, to date -- and we'll solve this problem, but we haven't yet -- renewables are still peak shaving, not base power. Is there an appetite that you see developing for other forms of base power that are cleaner, beyond carbon sequestration with coal -- i.e., nuclear? HAGUE: Yes. We have decided in Britain to build a new generation of nuclear power stations, and really see no option for that other than excessive dependence on oil and gas, and particularly on imports of liquefied gas. And so we see that actually as strategically necessary, as well as necessary from a climate-change point of view. Otherwise, we would -- our energy sector would become so heavily dependent on imports. So after quite a long gap in which we haven't built any new nuclear power stations, we are now opening the door to doing so again. They have to justify themselves economically -- WHITMAN: (Sure ?). HAGUE: -- but if they do so -- and the sites are now being identified, mainly the sites of the old ones -- then we will have, from the 2020s onwards, an expanding nuclear-power sector. Again -- and, of course, some European countries -- European countries vary a lot. Some don't allow any nuclear power at all. A country like France, I think, meets about 70 percent of its energy needs -- WHITMAN: A little more than that. HAGUE: -- from nuclear power. WHITMAN: Yeah. And Germany buys their power from France, even though they don't like nuclear. Yeah. HAGUE: Exactly. WHITMAN: You know about that. (Chuckles.) I'd like to open it up now to questions. And the secretary's been generous enough to say that he would answer questions on a whole host of issues, not just on climate change. But I'd ask you to please stand and to identify yourselves. Why don't we start over there, and then I'll work my way across. There should be microphones. QUESTIONER: Secretary, thank you very much for your remarks. Todd Johnson from Ferrari Consultancy. I'm hoping -- again, thank you for your remarks on an often-neglected part of foreign-policy debate. But I'm wondering if I can shift it to a -- certainly, not a neglected topic; that being the Strategic Defense Review -- which I know falls outside of your purview, but, of course, military force being part and parcel of foreign policy. I'm wondering how you can respond to some of the criticisms of it being a rushed process. Particularly in the British press, you often hear: Is this the right time to be doing it, or are they taking it at a pace that is perhaps a bit too fast? But I'm curious just to hear your response to that remark, and particularly in its effect upon the British armed forces. HAGUE: Well, it isn't a -- I don't see it as a rushed process. It's taking place now. It will be concluded by next month. And indeed, one of the key meetings on this will be tomorrow morning. I'll be going back during the night to London to take part in that in our National Security Council. We've been -- we've been engaged in it since May, and we really feel that senior members of our government ought to be able to make some important decisions in a -- in a five-month period. The reason why sometimes defense reviews take a lot longer than that is that endless arguments go on inside a defense ministry about what advice to give to the minister, and they spend a good year going around in circles and having different committees and arguments of their own, and then the ministers still only have a few months, or a few weeks, to make the decisions. And so -- yes, so we've driven it along in a way that we get the information quickly. And the other reason we have to do this is because decisions need to be made quite quickly. As an incoming government, we have inherited a very, very difficult financial position. Our country has borrowed as much money in four years as in the previous 1,000 years. That's not a sustainable situation. And we've inherited a defense budget which is 38 billion pounds -- might not seem a lot, compared to the Pentagon's budget -- but 38 billion pounds over-committed over the next 10 years. We're over- committed by that much compared to even a budget continuing at the current level. So we need to make some urgent decisions. There are ships and aircraft about to be built or bought and -- for which the money does not exist, and never existed actually. So somebody has to sort it out quite quickly. So for all of those reasons, we're doing it at the same pace as our comprehensive spending review for the whole of the government. And therefore, our spending priorities and our defense needs will be in alignment -- a novel idea in government, but it's what we are determined to bring about. And of course, it's a difficult process, the strategic defense (procedure ?), given the financial climate. But whatever we do in it, Britain will retain a global role. It will be a key ally of the United States. Whatever we do, the United States will find, that since we will continue to have an independent nuclear deterrent, we will continue to have intelligence services of extraordinary reach and capability which do a great deal of work with the United States, we will continue to have armed forces that can be deployed elsewhere to the world -- and of course, we're now the second-largest contributing nation in Afghanistan -- and so although we will have to make some adjustments and changes -- and no doubt, reductions -- I think Americans can be assured that we will still remain a very important ally and still pack a very important punch. WHITMAN: Yes. QUESTIONER: Thank you for being here. My name is Joseph Carey (sp). You touched on the significance of developing countries skipping, in a sense, having a carbon footprint. What can the developed countries do to encourage that, given the social demands that the developing countries have to solve in a rather immediate fashion? HAGUE: Provide finance. And there was a commitment at Copenhagen to provide $100 billion of early finance to help developing countries develop in the right way. And the United Kingdom is playing its part in that. We've already made 1-1/2 billion pounds available ourselves. So this is a very important part of our overseas development aid efforts. And in our case, we have also committed ourselves to reach, three years from now, the target of .7 percent of gross national income devoted to overseas development aid, which helps us to meet these climate finance commitments. So I think it's very important to do that. And indeed (a lot of ?) meeting the target -- developing countries meeting commitments on stopping deforestation, or in some cases on reforestation, particularly relies on that. So the provision of early finance in line with Copenhagen is of critical importance. And I think if we don't do that, people will say, well, even what was agreed at Copenhagen isn't being implemented, so the whole process will lack credibility. So we have to do that. And the other thing is sharing technology with them so that they are technologically in a position. And that -- as I say, well, there's a huge economic opportunity. Really it's very instructive to look at what the Gulf states, for instance, are doing in the development -- rapid development of low-carbon technologies. And unless the U.K., the United States and other Western nations really get into that ourselves, we will find that that whole market is taken by other people. So this is the importance of addressing this from a business point of view as well as a political point of view. WHITMAN: Could I just jump in quickly, as -- prerogative of the chair, to follow up on something that you said? Because you mentioned deforestation. I don't know if you're familiar with -- there was a NASA-funded study some 10, 11 years older -- old now that said that in the previous 300 years we would have had to double the amount of carbon emitted into the atmosphere to have the same impact as -- on climate change as we have seen from land use, from deforestation, development, and from farming practices. To what extent is Great Britain or any of the EU countries looking at that, not just air emissions but what we do for land planning, what's happening to the land not just within the developing world but also the developed world? HAGUE: Yes, we are looking at that. Certainly we're planting a lot of trees in Britain -- (chuckles) -- there is no doubt about it. The biggest impact and the biggest space comes -- of course, comes in the developed world. And we've (seen ?) some good stories, by the way. You know, India now has more forest than it had 10 or 20 years ago -- although it's not the -- you know, the rich rainforest that is so crucial to the planet. So we are looking at that. But perhaps we should look at it a bit more, in line with your question. WHITMAN: Question here. There's a microphone. QUESTIONER: Thank you, Mr. Secretary, for coming. My name is Roland Paul (sp). You mentioned in one of your earlier answers Afghanistan. As one of the major members of the NATO coalition in Afghanistan, could you give us a snapshot of how the war is going out there? HAGUE: Right, well, that may take the rest of the morning. WHITMAN: (Laughs.) HAGUE: Well, we are -- we're certainly making progress in a military sense. And I think we have to remember that it's really only in the last few months that the military forces that the -- that the generals believe are necessary have been assembled and have all been available. We are making progress. I've seen that for myself in Helmand. I've visited Afghanistan, I think, three times this year so far, and have found myself walking around in towns in Helmand, which you certainly couldn't have -- a visiting foreign minister would not have been able to walk around at this time last year, such as Nad e-Ali in the middle of Helmand. So we are making progress. But we have to be clear that there won't be a -- this is not a problem that can be solved purely by military means, while the military effort is absolutely crucial to making sure we can provide security in large parts of the country and (pushing/putting ?) the Taliban and the necessary pressure to encourage some of them to desist from fighting and to look for a political settlement. Now, the political process is vital, too, and that is what now -- the opportunity exists to take that forward. President Karzai now has the legitimacy, given by the peace jirga in June, to take that forward. He's formed his high-level peace council. So political process is important; so is the economic capacity of Afghanistan. We have increased by 40 percent this year our development aid to Afghanistan. A key question is whether the Afghan government will effectively implement all the commitments they made at the Kabul conference in July -- which are good commitments, which are very good detailed plans for the building up of a(n) economic, financial capacity of the Afghan state. We really have to hold them to that. This is a major role for the United States, United Kingdom and allied countries over the next year to try to make sure those commitments are implemented. And that, of course, includes the building up of the Afghan national security forces to the point where they can lead and sustain all their own operations by 2014. And they are on track in building -- the good news is, as of now, they are slightly ahead of track in building up the Afghan army, and now it's more than 130,000 strong. So we are making progress. But it remains -- I don't want to kid anybody about this. This remains a phenomenal challenge. This remains one of the most difficult challenges anywhere in the world. The people from the United States, United Kingdom, who are working out there, not only in the armed forces but development workers and other people working there, are doing a phenomenal job in the most difficult circumstances. And we will only succeed if all of these things -- the military progress, the economic capacity-building and the political process -- are successful. So we have to do all of those things in order to succeed. But I think we are going forward, not back, at the moment. WHITMAN: A question there. QUESTIONER: I'm Alexandra Starr with the Center on Law and Security. I actually wanted to move a little bit to domestic politics, if you're okay with that. Obviously, there was an election over the weekend and Ed Miliband became Labour leader, with significant union support that was pivotal. And I was wondering if you could comment on how that might shape the opposition, when they're out of power and, I guess, potentially if they do go back into power in the years ahead. HAGUE: Mm-hmm. (Laughter.) Well. Disastrous for them, of course. (Laughs.) (Laughter.) No, well, I congratulate Ed Miliband on his election. It's been an extraordinary thing, really, an election between two brothers for the leadership of a political party. Now, it's a difficult job, as I well know, because after our own election defeat in 1997, I became leader of the opposition. In fact, I have an exchange of e-mails that I can tell you about with David Miliband -- I don't think he'll mind. After the election, he sent me a note saying "Congratulations on being foreign secretary; you've now got the best job in the government." And I sent one back saying, "Yes, thank you very much; you are applying for the worst job in the world" -- (laughter) -- which is the job of leader of the opposition in the British Parliament. So I'm sure it will be difficult in many ways. He will find it as a disadvantage that he was elected with trade union -- that the trade unions gave the decisive margin of support, because we're seeing in the British Labour Party a reassertion, really, of trade union activity and dominance. The vast majority of the Labour Party's funding in recent years has come from trade unions. Tony Blair had tried to move the Labour Party away from that, but it has moved back. I think the Labour Party is in danger of moving back, therefore, in many respects. I believe Ed Miliband has said in the last 24 hours that new Labour is dead. And that is -- that may be a problem for the Labour Party going forward, because it was new Labour that was elected, not old Labour, in the Blair period. So it remains to be seen how he will develop the Labour Party. The immediate debates will be about the spending. I've mentioned the need to reduce spending in the U.K. This is a fiscally conservative government in the U.K. In fact, it has been made possible, our coalition, because over time the Conservatives have become more socially liberal and the Liberals have become more fiscally conservative. And together, we have formed a socially liberal, fiscally conservative administration -- an interesting concept for the United States maybe. (Laughter.) QUESTIONER: Yes. HAGUE: And the -- but we are determined, therefore, to get the national finances in shape. We are reducing our spending by 83 billion pounds over the next few years. And we now want to know from the new leader of the Labor Party where he would cut the spending, in detail, since he did say when he was running for the leadership he would provide that information before the government publishes its information. So he's got three weeks now to provide his version of where we reduce government spending in Britain, given the shocking state that his party left the country in. But I think really, on an international platform, I won't go any further in a partisan way. (Laughter.) WHITMAN: We have a question here at the center. QUESTIONER: Ross Boutros (sp), New York University. Mr. Secretary, you have generously agreed to answer questions beyond the scope of your talk this morning. We would all be interested in your view on Middle East peace process, in which you have participated, particularly in the context of what has happened in the past 24 hours. HAGUE: Well, this is indeed a crucial area, and one on which some encouraging meetings have taken place. Everyone who has taken part in or witnessed the early meetings in Washington, in Sharm el-Sheikh, in Jerusalem over the last month, has said they went very well, and that the sincerity of both sides is very apparent. So there is some encouragement there. Clearly, we now have a problem in the expiring, without renewal so far, of the settlement moratorium last night. But we urge -- in the U.K., we urge very strongly the government of Israel to extend the settlement moratorium. And we have put that very strongly through the ministers. Our prime minister has communicated that to the Israeli prime minister. I will meet Mr. Lieberman, the Israeli foreign minister, in a few hours time here in New York and will strongly argue for this again. And I'll also meet Secretary Clinton at lunchtime to discuss where we are on this. But I think there is -- there's no new information I can give you about that at the moment. The moratorium has expired. The Arab League has an important meeting coming up on October 9th in Libya, which I think will be a crucial moment in this since the Palestinians are in the talks with the blessing of the Arab League. So I continue to believe that Israel should extend the settlement moratorium. In any case, in our view, all settlements in occupied territory are illegal, and should not be taking place at all. But even from a pragmatic point of view, I think it's in Israel's own best interests to extend the freeze. And their ministers generally say to us it is impossible to do so, but I will say it's entirely possible if they wanted to do so, and I still hope they will do so. I will put that case strongly to the Israeli foreign minister this afternoon. WHITMAN: A question in the back, please. QUESTIONER: Elizabeth Bramwell, Bramwell Capital. I wanted to ask a question about unilateral climate change or control. And if we do it unilaterally, you know, I think it has an impact on driving manufacturers to increasingly manufacture in China. And so, you know, here we are at 10 percent unemployment, and we have a billion -- whatever, trillion-six (dollars) deficit. And I just wonder how we should prioritize this. And if we were to unilaterally go forward, you know, how do you see manufacturing, as a percentage of the economy in the U.K. and England, going forward as, you know, part of the total? And ultimately, if we keep driving manufacturing out of this country, doesn't it have an impact on national security? HAGUE: Yes. If you lose your manufacturing sector, I think it does, and we strongly have that view in Britain as well. But we are very much of the view that embracing this low-carbon future is the way forward for manufacturing, and that (any ?) manufacturing that does not do so will rapidly be left out. This is the way to keep your manufacturing sector, because the market will move. You know, a few years ago, I and many British people unilaterally decided, "I was only going to buy a hybrid car." And we were then all buying Lexus cars, because that was the only one, from Japan. But that has now meant that British manufacturers are racing to develop their own hybrid cars and are about to bring them out in wide -- in a wide variety of models (in/and ?) Land Rover, Range Rover, whatever. So, actually you have to get in on the low-carbon technology if your manufacturing is going to succeed. Because if most of the rest of the world is going that direction and the United States isn't, well, then that will really hit U.S. manufacturing. So this is the future. This is the -- this is the way to go for successful manufacturing, not just (to be stoking the ?) manufacturing of the 20th century. WHITMAN: A question here. QUESTIONER: Hello. I'm Kassia Yanosek from Hudson Clean Energy Partners. My question actually is about process. You talked a lot about the need for political will in getting to a global deal, or something of that nature. But if you look at the process -- the U.N. process, in particular -- clearly there may be other fora that may be better negotiating bodies that can actually get closer to a solution. Could you speak to your view on the Major Economies Forum or some bilateral discussions that are going on, as to forum that are actually moving the ball forward? Thank you. HAGUE: Well, I think those things are all very, very useful. I've described the situation with the European Union, for one, is taking action together, and we wanted to take more action together. So there you have already the world's largest single market -- trading market, and 27 industrialized nations acting together. So, yeah, of course there is a strong role for other fora. But in the end, to have a binding global deal, which, as I said, then gives everybody the confidence to do this together, I think it has to be through the U.N. process. And yes, that may seem a little chaotic and unsatisfactory after the events of the last year, but I think we're now going about it in a different way. I have a lot of confidence in how Mexico has conducted this through this year, aiming for certain agreements, hopefully certain agreements at Cancun, on (funds ?), on adaptation, on technology, on forestation. So if we do that -- if the U.N. process can now add certain viable agreement and show that the Copenhagen Accords are being implemented, well, that then ultimately underpins a later global deal. So we're having to do it at a different pace, but I think it is very important to still do it -- for all the reasons I've set out in my speech earlier -- to do it on that U.N. basis and not to lose heart just because there was -- there were important setbacks at Copenhagen. But is there a big role for other -- for what we do bilaterally and in other multilateral fora? Absolutely there is. We should -- really, what I'm arguing here is we should use every channel of foreign policy to promote these objectives. WHITMAN: Well, in the interests of time, I think we have one more question, and I haven't been to this side of the room, so -- we'll go right here and then we need to wrap up, get everybody up on time. QUESTIONER: David Nachman from DLA Piper. Mr. Secretary, why do you suppose that the Senate and public opinion in this country generally do not share your sense of urgency or your sense of the opportunity in a low-carbon economy? And if you were to give advice to us here in the States, what two or three steps would you suggest could most rapidly and effectively turn that situation around? HAGUE: Hmm. I don't know. You can probably tell me better than I can tell you. I would say opinion is very mixed, from what I've seen in the United States. You know, it's -- I think it would be wrong to characterize the United States as full of people who deny all of this. But I think there is -- I imagine there is quite a lot of skepticism about whether other countries will meet their commitments. And maybe there is more skepticism here about whether climate change is taking place or is man-made. Perhaps that debate -- that -- there may not be as much acceptance of the science as there is in European countries. And there will -- has to be a rational debate. I don't think we should ever be dismissive, by the way, of that debate. I mean tolerance of people who have a different point of view, there's a proper argument to be had, but certainly from everything I've seen, it's very, very convincing. So we should always have that debate. So those may be among the obstacles. And I think it's -- I think the connection between economic opportunity and climate change has not been sufficiently well made. And it's really up to business and political leaders to make that connection for people, I think. Otherwise, people will see it as why should we lose out and make sacrifices, when China is, you know, emitting more and more per capita. And we have to explain that there's an opportunity here and that even China is doing certain things about it. So that is up to leaders to address that, also leaders across politics. I think one of the things that's worked in Britain is that leaders across the political spectrum have embraced this argument, and that it was a bit of a shock to people when the Conservative Party embraced it so strongly. But what is conservatism? It has to do with preserving the best and finest in the world, whether they be habits or institutions or environment. That should be an essential part of a conservative approach to life. And so we see it as a natural part of our conservative philosophy, and I hope American conservatives can (come to ?) view it in the same light. And I'm sure that would help a lot, as well. WHITMAN: Well, Minister, thank you very much for your time, given your incredible schedule. Thank you. (C) COPYRIGHT 2010, FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC., 1000 VERMONT AVE. NW; 5TH FLOOR; WASHINGTON, DC - 20005, USA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ANY REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION IS EXPRESSLY PROHIBITED. UNAUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION CONSTITUTES A MISAPPROPRIATION UNDER APPLICABLE UNFAIR COMPETITION LAW, AND FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. RESERVES THE RIGHT TO PURSUE ALL REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO IT IN RESPECT TO SUCH MISAPPROPRIATION. FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. IS A PRIVATE FIRM AND IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. NO COPYRIGHT IS CLAIMED AS TO ANY PART OF THE ORIGINAL WORK PREPARED BY A UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OFFICER OR EMPLOYEE AS PART OF THAT PERSON'S OFFICIAL DUTIES. FOR INFORMATION ON SUBSCRIBING TO FNS, PLEASE CALL CARINA NYBERG AT 202-347-1400. THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. CHRISTINE TODD WHITMAN: Good morning, everyone. In the interest of keeping to the council's usual discipline, we will start now in order to get everybody out by 9:00. I'd like to remind everybody and ask you: Please turn off totally your BlackBerries and cell phones, just because they might interfere with the -- with the microphone. And for this breakfast we are on the record, so one of the things that the mikes do obviously is for recording. I want to start it, though, by saying this is the Russell C. Leffingwell Lecture, and I want to thank the Leffingwell Pulling family, several of whom are here today -- not the whole, by any means; I know the family well enough to be able to say that with some certainty. But I do want to thank Tom Leffingwell Pulling and his son Edward Leffingwell Pulling for ensuring that this series can continue in the way that it has. So thank you, Tommy, and thank you to all Pullings and Leffingwells. We really appreciate it. This is the -- this is an -- a -- an on-the-record session. I am not going to spend a lot of time introducing our guest, because you all have a copy of his resume, but we are extremely pleased and lucky to have the honorable -- Right Honorable William Hague, who's the secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs for the United Kingdom and a member of Parliament, someone who has -- he's been here for the week, or longer than a week. He's done a series of meetings. We are very fortunate to have him here towards the end of his stay to talk about, today, a subject specifically in his talk, one that is of interest to the United States, and we may be seen as being a little bit behind the times on it, which is the issue of climate change. But I would welcome the minister to come forward, the secretary, and to give his remarks, and then he will take -- as is usual council practice, we will have a little bit of dialogue between the two of us and then we will open it up to questions. But I assure you we will get everyone out on time at 9. Mr. Hague? (Applause.) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS WILLIAM HAGUE: Well, thank you very much, Governor Whitman. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I'm delighted to be here at the Council on Foreign Relations. Thank you very much for the invitation and for the punctuality with which you run all these things. It reminds me of when I first went to speak to the farming community in my own district. And they had quite a long meeting: They did a lot of business; they looked at all their accounts; they had reports on what they'd done all year. And then they said, Mr. Hague, do you want to speak to us now? And I said, well, how long do you want me to speak for? And they said, you can speak for as long as you'd like, but in four minutes' time we're leaving. (Laughter.) And that was a good discipline on how to give a short speech. I'm -- I want to talk today about why I believe that we as foreign-policy practitioners need to up our game in building a credible and effective response to climate change. But let me also (set ?) that when we come to the question-and-answer, I'm happy to answer questions about any other aspect of foreign policy. We've been dealing a lot over the last week in all the discussions here with Yemen, on which we as the United Kingdom have been particularly focused; with Pakistan; Middle East peace process, of course, with which we're preoccupied somewhat today; with Iran -- I had my first meeting with the Iranian foreign minister a few days ago, which was interesting; and with the western Balkans -- in recent times they've been very, very active. And we are engaged in intensifying our relations with the emerging economies around the world. So there's a lot of other -- of other subjects to discuss on foreign policy, and I'm happy to answer questions about those subjects as well. But I particularly wanted to make the point to this audience and to circulate to a wider audience certain points about climate change this morning, which is perhaps the 21st century's biggest foreign- policy challenge, along with preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. I believe those two threats over the longer term are the biggest threats to the peace and security of the world. A world that is failing to respond to climate change is one in which the values embodied in the United Nations will not be met, and it's a world in which competition and conflict would win out over collaboration. We're at a very crucial point in the global debate on this subject. Many people are questioning, in the wake of Copenhagen, whether we should continue to seek a response to climate change through the U.N. and whether we can ever hope to deal with this enormous challenge. And I will first argue today that an effective response to climate change underpins our security and prosperity; second, that our response should be to strive for a binding global deal, whatever the setbacks; and third, I will set out why effective deployment of foreign policy assets is crucial to mobilizing the political will needed if we're going to shape an effective response. Now, Ban Ki-moon is right to have made climate change his top priority. Two weeks ago, I was talking about Britain's values in a networked world. I said then that a successful response to climate change must be a central objective of British foreign policy. And I said this not only because I believe action against climate change is in line with a values-based foreign policy, but because it underpins our prosperity and security. You can't have food, water or energy security without climate security; they are interconnected and inseparable. They form four resource pillars on which global security, prosperity and equity stand. Each depends on the other. Plentiful, affordable food requires reliable and affordable access to water and energy. Increasing dependence on coal, oil and gas threatens climate security, increasing the severity of floods and droughts, damaging food production, exacerbating the loss of biodiversity, and in countries that rely on hydropower, undermining energy security through the impact on the availability of water. As the world becomes more networked, the impact of climate change in one country or region will affect the prosperity and security of others around the world. No one can have failed to be appalled by the devastating floods in Pakistan. They overwhelmed the capacity of government to respond and opened political space for extremists. While Pakistan has borne the brunt of the human impact, China too has been hit on a vast scale by a seemingly endless sequence of droughts, floods and deadly mudslides. The Russian drought last month damaged the wheat harvest, leading to an export ban. World prices surged, hitting the poorest hardest, and sparking riots over bread prices in far away Mozambique. While no one weather event can ever be linked with certainty to climate change, the broad patterns of abnormality seen this year are consistent with climate-change models. They provide an illustration of the events we will be encountering increasingly in the future. So the clock is ticking, and the time to act is now. We must all take responsibility for this threat and take robust action. But we must also be clear-headed about the difficulties of reaching agreement and not lose heart when the going gets tough. The post-war leaders set up the United Nations in the aftermath of conflagration. They saw the pressing need for global solutions to global problems: cooperation not conflict, through frameworks and institutions embedded in the rule of law, and an international system that is fair and offers everyone a realistic prospect of security and prosperity. Failure to respond to climate change is inimical to all these values, undermining trust between nations, intensifying competition for resources, and shrinking the political space available for cooperation. It is an affront to fairness, since it puts the greatest burden on those who have done least to cause the problem and are least able to deal with its consequences. It is incompatible with the values and aspirations that the U.N. embodies. And it's incompatible with the values and aspirations of British foreign policy. For more than 20 years, we've been striving to build an effective international response to climate change. But we have lacked the collective ambition required. We need to shift investment urgently from high-carbon "business as usual" to the low-carbon economy. This means building an essentially decarbonized global economy by mid- century. At the same time, we must ensure development is climate resilient; otherwise, the changes in climate that are already unavoidable will block the path for hundreds of millions of people from poverty to prosperity. These changes also threaten to sweep away the investments in development we have made, and just as the bridges and schools in Pakistan were swept away. To drive that shift in investment from low to high carbon, we need a global climate change deal under the United Nations. Now, some have argued that we should abandon hope of doing so. They say Copenhagen proved it's all too difficult; we should focus instead on less inclusive and less demanding responses, such as coalitions of the willing. But we believe this would be a strategic error. It mistakes the nature of the task, which is to expand the realm of the possible, not to lower our ambition by accepting its current limits. And we must recognize this at Cancun. One thing Copenhagen did give us was a set of political commitments, captured in the Copenhagen Accord, on which we can build. More than 120 countries have now associated themselves with that accord, and that represents a broad and growing consensus. We now need to ensure that we live up to the commitments we made to each other in the accord, and reach out even more widely. Copenhagen, despite those accords, was a strategic setback, but it was not by any means the end of the road. We need to be clear why it failed to live up to high expectations and why it did not deliver a legally binding deal. Many people say that it failed because of process: The diplomats and the politicians had created a negotiation that was too difficult and too complex. But this misses the point. International treaties are an outcome, not an input, of political bargains. If you've made the political commitment to deliver, you can make the process work to deliver. The real reason Copenhagen did not deliver on high expectations was a lack of political will. Many in developing countries saw a gap between the words and the deeds of the industrialized economies. They questioned whether we really believed our own rhetoric. And to answer those questions, we each need to start at home. That is why the coalition government to which I belong has committed itself to being the greenest government ever in the United Kingdom, and why, with others in Europe, we are calling on the European Union to commit to a 30-percent cut in emissions by 2020 without waiting for the rest of the world to act. The UK is already the world leader in offshore wind, with more projects installed, in planning and in construction than any other country in the world. We're undertaking the most radical transformation of our electricity sector ever. We aim to provide over 30 percent of our domestic electricity from renewables by 2020. We have committed to build no new coal-fired power stations without carbon capture and storage technology, and we've announced our intention to continue the demonstration projects of that. And because it's imperative that foreign and domestic policies are mutually reinforcing, we must ensure that our approach is coherent. Now, that's one reason we have established the new British National Security Council: to ensure this happens across the full range of issues, including climate change. And that's why I work hand in glove with Chris Huhne, the British Energy and Climate Change secretary, and Andrew Mitchell, the International Development secretary, to ensure that our domestic action reflects our level of international ambition. But we won't succeed, of course, if we act alone. We must aim for a framework that is global and binding. It needs to be global because climate change affects everyone. Only a response that allows everyone a voice will generate a sense of common purpose and legitimacy. Only a response that is binding will convince investors that we intend to keep the promises we make to each other. Businesses need clear political signals, so let's show them an unequivocal green light. We are now a few weeks away from the 16th Conference of Parties on Climate Change in Cancun. And I commend the consultative and collaborative approach Mexico has taken ahead of this meeting. Thanks to their determination and foresight, we have a chance in Cancun to regain momentum and make progress on key issues such as forests, technology, finance and transparency of commitments. Cancun will -- may not get us all the way to a full agreement, but it can put us back on track to one. That said, the negotiations can't succeed inside a bubble. The negotiators in the U.N. process can't themselves build political will. They have to operate on the basis of current political realities in the countries they represent. And it's those realities that limit the ambition that we can set in the -- in such negotiations, and it's those realities that we now need to shift. There is no global consensus on what climate change puts at risk, geopolitically and for the global economy, and thus on the scale and urgency of the response we need. We must build a global consensus if we are to guarantee our citizens security and prosperity. That is a job for foreign policy. A fundamental purpose here for foreign policy is to shift the political debate, to create the political space for leaders and negotiators to reach agreement. We didn't get that right before Copenhagen, and we must get it right now. So we urgently need to mobilize foreign ministers and the diplomats they lead, as well as institutions such as the Council on Foreign Relations, to put climate change at the heart of foreign- policy thinking. When I became foreign secretary in May, I said the core goals of our foreign policy were to guarantee Britain's security and prosperity. Robust global action on climate change is essential to that agenda. That is why the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office, under my leadership, is a vocal advocate for climate diplomacy. All British ambassadors carry the argument for a global low-carbon transition in their breast pocket or in their handbag. Climate change is part of their daily vocabulary, alongside the traditional themes of foreign policy. And they're supported by our unique network of climate attaches throughout the world. The core assets of foreign policy are its networks and its convening power. Foreign policy can build political impulses to overcome barriers between sectors and cultures. In a networked world, diplomacy builds partnerships beyond government. And nowhere are those partnerships more vital than on climate. So we must mobilize all our networks, not just across government but between governments, using organizations such as the Commonwealth as well. We must reach out, beyond, to NGOs, faith groups and businesses. And of all these, perhaps business engagement is the key to making a difference. It's business that will lead low-carbon transition. It's business that best understands the incentives needed to help us all prosper. We must also harness scientific expertise in cutting-edge low- carbon technologies. The scientific community will develop the goods which will power the low-carbon economy and drive global ambition on climate change. And that's why the British government has a science and innovation network, which fosters collaborative research in the U.K. and other countries. Now, what can the U.K. and the European Union do to make that fundamental shift and shape a global consensus on climate change? The most serious problem at Copenhagen, and the strongest brake on political will, was and is a lack of confidence in the low-carbon economy. Too few people in too few countries are yet convinced that a rapid move to low carbon is compatible with economic recovery and growth. They see the short-term economic and domestic stability risks before the opportunities and the longer-term risks of inaction. There should be only one European response to that confidence gap. The EU, in my view, must accelerate its own progress and demonstrate that a low-carbon growth path makes us more competitive. I am convinced this is in the long-term interests of Europe's economy. We have learned painful lessons from the oil price shocks. We must modernize our infrastructure. The opportunities are out there. The global industry in low-carbon and environmental goods and services is already estimated to be worth up to 3.2 trillion pounds a year. Nearly a million British people are now employed in this sector, and that's why we are creating a green investment bank to ensure that we can properly support and develop low-carbon industry. But we need to redouble our efforts, both in the EU (itself ?) and in our engagement with partners. Each of us as member states will be better able to accelerate if we're doing so together as the world's largest single market. And by opening up this effort through partnership with others, we can make it easier for them to accelerate, too. So we'll be at the forefront of pushing for low-carbon modernization of Europe's infrastructure and energy policy. The European Union's budget until 2013 is set out in the current "financial perspective". We will argue -- we will need to agree the financial perspective for the seven years after that, the period including our 2020 climate goals. And it's -- as ever, it's right that the EU budget should reflect the prevailing economic circumstances. It's also right that we direct the budget to today's challenges, not those of yesterday. And that means one that supports the transition to a low-carbon economy. Action in Europe alone will not be enough. We need both the developed and developing world to take action. And this week Guido Westerwelle, the German foreign minister, and I have tasked our teams to come together to shape a coordinated, diplomacy-led effort on climate change, combining the strengths of our respective foreign services. I've just put the case for bringing a new urgency for low-carbon transition within the EU. But together we should carry that urgency in external dialogues, whether they are with the United States, China or India. The transition to low carbon will happen faster and maximize the benefit for all if the United States -- historically the world's largest emitter -- is at the leading edge. I recognize the political challenges that the U.S. administration faces and welcome President Obama's commitment to combat climate change. As he said in his State of the Union speech, "the nation that leads the clean-energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy." Whatever the outcome of the upcoming midterm elections in the U.S., there is scope for political unity around an economic agenda that targets new energy opportunities and new jobs. American business understands this new market and should want to lead it. But to make these new clean-energy investments at the required pace and on a sufficient scale, they need the right incentives. On climate, as in so many areas, the world looks to the US for leadership, because it has the economic clout and diplomatic leverage to shift the global debate. And I look forward to working with the U.S. administration and indeed with the Council on Foreign Relations to raise global ambitions and put us back on the path to sustainable growth. A key challenge for Europe is to build an economic partnership with China that reinforces the steps China is taking towards a low- carbon economy. These steps include its recent announcement of the five provinces and eight cities that have been designated as China's low-carbon pilots. Together these pilots cover 350 million people, so an ambitious approach to these schemes, tenaciously implemented, could provide a critical boost to global confidence in the concept of low- carbon development and help put China on the path to sustainable prosperity. It could also produce huge two-way investment and partnership opportunities. Europe should place itself at the heart of these, working with China to maximize the ambition and the opportunities and to build the shared technology standards that will shape a global low- carbon market. In China's case, low-carbon opportunity is matched by urgent low- carbon need. The pace of growth in China means average Chinese per- capita emissions could soon eclipse those of Europe. So while China has taken some very welcome steps, without a commitment from China to further decisive action, the efforts of others will be in vain. The emerging economies face a dilemma. Often they are the most vulnerable to the direct effects of climate change. But they are concerned that action against climate change will adversely affect their development. The challenge to all countries is to have a high- growth, low-carbon economy. Some, like Brazil, which derives nearly half its energy from clean and renewable resources, are rising to that challenge. India is another, embodying in microcosm the challenge that climate change poses to us all. Threatened by food, water and energy insecurity, India has responded with ambitious plans to generate 20 gigawatts of solar power by 2022. South Africa, a coal-dependent economy, the success of which is so important to growth and prosperity within the continent, has made a significant offer to deviate their emissions from the business-as- usual pathway. The opportunity is for the emerging economies -- for the emerging economies is to make a direct leap to low carbon, avoiding the high- carbon lock-in that we see in the developed world: a new, sustainable pathway for prosperity and security. A global low-carbon economy is not an idealist's pipe dream but a 21st-century realist's imperative. Countries that adapt quickly to a carbon-constrained world will be better able to deliver lasting prosperity for their citizens. As a Permanent Security Council member, I'm determined that the U.K. will play its full part in that, not least by supporting climate finance for the poorest. Collectively, we share a responsibility to those most vulnerable to the impact of climate change. Bangladesh, with its densely populated coastal region, is particularly susceptible to rising sea levels. Glacial melt, sea-level rises and El Nino-type events threaten the lives of millions across South America. And the very existence of many small island states is under threat. We have a shared vision to meet the Millennium Development Goals. But in a world without action on climate change, that vision will remain a dream, and the efforts of the last 10 years would So climate change is one of the gravest threats to our security and prosperity. Unless we take robust and timely action to deal with it, no country will be immune to its effects. However difficult it might seem now, a global deal under the U.N. is the only response to this threat which will create the necessary confidence to drive a low- carbon transition. We must be undaunted by the scale of the challenge. We must continue to strive for agreement. We must not accept that because there is no consensus on a way forward now, that there never will be one. And to change the debate, we must imaginatively deploy all of the foreign policy assets in our armory until we've shaped that global consensus. A successful response to climate change will not only stabilize the climate, but open the way to a future in which we can meet our needs through cooperation, in accordance with the ideals of the United Nations. Failure to do so will enhance competitive tendencies and make the world more dangerous, so this is not actually a hard choice. We have to get this right. If we do, we can still shape our world. And if we don't, the world will determine our destiny for us. Thank you very much indeed for listening. (Applause.) WHITMAN: Well, thank you very much for a really very compelling discussion and for laying out a comprehensive case. I do want to ask you, you mentioned the challenges of meeting actually the current budgets under Kyoto for the countries that have signed the protocol. Looking at the European Union -- and you touched on the fiscal and financial challenges -- how are you going to find, and where -- how are these countries moving toward finding the money necessary to invest in the infrastructure, particularly energy as you touched on, that will really make the most comprehensive difference in the climate change? HAGUE: Well, I think we have to make sure we find the money. And there is scope to leverage an enormous private-sector involvement here. And that is where most of the involvement in our -- most of the investment in our own renewable-energy infrastructure is taking place. You have to create the right incentives for them to do so. The -- but we're used to doing that and tackling such issues. You know, some years ago in Britain, and I think in many other countries, we created a tax differential on unleaded fuel that led to everybody switching over to it, giving people incentives to invest in the right infrastructure, the necessary access to the markets. And sometimes the -- sometimes some level of subsidy and tax concessions and so on helps to bring that about. And so I think that is a very important part of budgetary considerations. And, of course, it can lead over time to substantial savings in many economies, when they have more renewable-energy infrastructure. So looked at in the perspective of 20, 30 years, it's very sensible to make such investments. WHITMAN: I've recognized that. It's not -- we don't always look in 20-, 30-year segments. HAGUE: No, that's very true. WHITMAN: This is the challenge. How do you see -- again, you touched on -- very diplomatically and briefly -- on the United States's role here. But given that there's likely to be a change in the construct of Congress after this election -- and I doubt it is going to be one that is going to have an -- a renewed appetite in climate change, given what I know of some of the races that are out there -- what's that going to do to the impetus in the European Union, in the United Kingdom, to continuing to be at the forefront and making these kinds of very, very substantial investments? HAGUE: Well, it won't change the impetus in the United Kingdom and the European Union. We are determined to go ahead whatever is happening in the rest of the world. Actually, we have passed a climate-change act designed to reduce our emissions in the U.K. by 34 percent by the end of this decade, by 80 percent by the year 2050. We will do that, and we will press our EU colleagues to do the other things I have described -- unilaterally; we will do that irrespective of global deals. And I believe that will give us enormous economic opportunities. And I think that countries that aren't getting in on that will miss out on some of those economic opportunities. So as time goes on, the economic case will be getting more and more compelling -- that each country needs a thriving low-carbon business sector; that there will be billions and tens of billions and potentially hundreds of billions of dollars of exports in this sector. With -- nations that do not get in on that are going to miss out on it. When you look at China doing its low-carbon cities and you look at developments in the Gulf now and Abu Dhabi working on a zero-carbon city, countries that don't get in on this are going to miss out on a lot. And so the (politics ?), as well as the altruistic case, will mount over the coming years for driving a low-carbon economy. But I think there is a strong political case as well. And perhaps in the British Conservative Party, we are maybe -- well, maybe we're not listened to by American politicians. I don't know, but I hope we are. Perhaps we are in one of the strongest positions to influence those on the right in American politics. I know the first time I talked to a Republican audience about climate change, they looked at me as if I'd gone very strange indeed. But there are -- there are leading Republicans who agree with this, who have promoted climate change legislation. And so -- and all parties have to develop their views in the face of the facts and the evidence of the times. So I hope that will happen across American politics. WHITMAN: I'm sure there are a lot of questions out there, but I'd like to ask just one more before I turn it over. You talked about addressing the energy sector and energy issues through the renewables, particularly wind for Great Britain. We know, though, to date -- and we'll solve this problem, but we haven't yet -- renewables are still peak shaving, not base power. Is there an appetite that you see developing for other forms of base power that are cleaner, beyond carbon sequestration with coal -- i.e., nuclear? HAGUE: Yes. We have decided in Britain to build a new generation of nuclear power stations, and really see no option for that other than excessive dependence on oil and gas, and particularly on imports of liquefied gas. And so we see that actually as strategically necessary, as well as necessary from a climate-change point of view. Otherwise, we would -- our energy sector would become so heavily dependent on imports. So after quite a long gap in which we haven't built any new nuclear power stations, we are now opening the door to doing so again. They have to justify themselves economically -- WHITMAN: (Sure ?). HAGUE: -- but if they do so -- and the sites are now being identified, mainly the sites of the old ones -- then we will have, from the 2020s onwards, an expanding nuclear-power sector. Again -- and, of course, some European countries -- European countries vary a lot. Some don't allow any nuclear power at all. A country like France, I think, meets about 70 percent of its energy needs -- WHITMAN: A little more than that. HAGUE: -- from nuclear power. WHITMAN: Yeah. And Germany buys their power from France, even though they don't like nuclear. Yeah. HAGUE: Exactly. WHITMAN: You know about that. (Chuckles.) I'd like to open it up now to questions. And the secretary's been generous enough to say that he would answer questions on a whole host of issues, not just on climate change. But I'd ask you to please stand and to identify yourselves. Why don't we start over there, and then I'll work my way across. There should be microphones. QUESTIONER: Secretary, thank you very much for your remarks. Todd Johnson from Ferrari Consultancy. I'm hoping -- again, thank you for your remarks on an often-neglected part of foreign-policy debate. But I'm wondering if I can shift it to a -- certainly, not a neglected topic; that being the Strategic Defense Review -- which I know falls outside of your purview, but, of course, military force being part and parcel of foreign policy. I'm wondering how you can respond to some of the criticisms of it being a rushed process. Particularly in the British press, you often hear: Is this the right time to be doing it, or are they taking it at a pace that is perhaps a bit too fast? But I'm curious just to hear your response to that remark, and particularly in its effect upon the British armed forces. HAGUE: Well, it isn't a -- I don't see it as a rushed process. It's taking place now. It will be concluded by next month. And indeed, one of the key meetings on this will be tomorrow morning. I'll be going back during the night to London to take part in that in our National Security Council. We've been -- we've been engaged in it since May, and we really feel that senior members of our government ought to be able to make some important decisions in a -- in a five-month period. The reason why sometimes defense reviews take a lot longer than that is that endless arguments go on inside a defense ministry about what advice to give to the minister, and they spend a good year going around in circles and having different committees and arguments of their own, and then the ministers still only have a few months, or a few weeks, to make the decisions. And so -- yes, so we've driven it along in a way that we get the information quickly. And the other reason we have to do this is because decisions need to be made quite quickly. As an incoming government, we have inherited a very, very difficult financial position. Our country has borrowed as much money in four years as in the previous 1,000 years. That's not a sustainable situation. And we've inherited a defense budget which is 38 billion pounds -- might not seem a lot, compared to the Pentagon's budget -- but 38 billion pounds over-committed over the next 10 years. We're over- committed by that much compared to even a budget continuing at the current level. So we need to make some urgent decisions. There are ships and aircraft about to be built or bought and -- for which the money does not exist, and never existed actually. So somebody has to sort it out quite quickly. So for all of those reasons, we're doing it at the same pace as our comprehensive spending review for the whole of the government. And therefore, our spending priorities and our defense needs will be in alignment -- a novel idea in government, but it's what we are determined to bring about. And of course, it's a difficult process, the strategic defense (procedure ?), given the financial climate. But whatever we do in it, Britain will retain a global role. It will be a key ally of the United States. Whatever we do, the United States will find, that since we will continue to have an independent nuclear deterrent, we will continue to have intelligence services of extraordinary reach and capability which do a great deal of work with the United States, we will continue to have armed forces that can be deployed elsewhere to the world -- and of course, we're now the second-largest contributing nation in Afghanistan -- and so although we will have to make some adjustments and changes -- and no doubt, reductions -- I think Americans can be assured that we will still remain a very important ally and still pack a very important punch. WHITMAN: Yes. QUESTIONER: Thank you for being here. My name is Joseph Carey (sp). You touched on the significance of developing countries skipping, in a sense, having a carbon footprint. What can the developed countries do to encourage that, given the social demands that the developing countries have to solve in a rather immediate fashion? HAGUE: Provide finance. And there was a commitment at Copenhagen to provide $100 billion of early finance to help developing countries develop in the right way. And the United Kingdom is playing its part in that. We've already made 1-1/2 billion pounds available ourselves. So this is a very important part of our overseas development aid efforts. And in our case, we have also committed ourselves to reach, three years from now, the target of .7 percent of gross national income devoted to overseas development aid, which helps us to meet these climate finance commitments. So I think it's very important to do that. And indeed (a lot of ?) meeting the target -- developing countries meeting commitments on stopping deforestation, or in some cases on reforestation, particularly relies on that. So the provision of early finance in line with Copenhagen is of critical importance. And I think if we don't do that, people will say, well, even what was agreed at Copenhagen isn't being implemented, so the whole process will lack credibility. So we have to do that. And the other thing is sharing technology with them so that they are technologically in a position. And that -- as I say, well, there's a huge economic opportunity. Really it's very instructive to look at what the Gulf states, for instance, are doing in the development -- rapid development of low-carbon technologies. And unless the U.K., the United States and other Western nations really get into that ourselves, we will find that that whole market is taken by other people. So this is the importance of addressing this from a business point of view as well as a political point of view. WHITMAN: Could I just jump in quickly, as -- prerogative of the chair, to follow up on something that you said? Because you mentioned deforestation. I don't know if you're familiar with -- there was a NASA-funded study some 10, 11 years older -- old now that said that in the previous 300 years we would have had to double the amount of carbon emitted into the atmosphere to have the same impact as -- on climate change as we have seen from land use, from deforestation, development, and from farming practices. To what extent is Great Britain or any of the EU countries looking at that, not just air emissions but what we do for land planning, what's happening to the land not just within the developing world but also the developed world? HAGUE: Yes, we are looking at that. Certainly we're planting a lot of trees in Britain -- (chuckles) -- there is no doubt about it. The biggest impact and the biggest space comes -- of course, comes in the developed world. And we've (seen ?) some good stories, by the way. You know, India now has more forest than it had 10 or 20 years ago -- although it's not the -- you know, the rich rainforest that is so crucial to the planet. So we are looking at that. But perhaps we should look at it a bit more, in line with your question. WHITMAN: Question here. There's a microphone. QUESTIONER: Thank you, Mr. Secretary, for coming. My name is Roland Paul (sp). You mentioned in one of your earlier answers Afghanistan. As one of the major members of the NATO coalition in Afghanistan, could you give us a snapshot of how the war is going out there? HAGUE: Right, well, that may take the rest of the morning. WHITMAN: (Laughs.) HAGUE: Well, we are -- we're certainly making progress in a military sense. And I think we have to remember that it's really only in the last few months that the military forces that the -- that the generals believe are necessary have been assembled and have all been available. We are making progress. I've seen that for myself in Helmand. I've visited Afghanistan, I think, three times this year so far, and have found myself walking around in towns in Helmand, which you certainly couldn't have -- a visiting foreign minister would not have been able to walk around at this time last year, such as Nad e-Ali in the middle of Helmand. So we are making progress. But we have to be clear that there won't be a -- this is not a problem that can be solved purely by military means, while the military effort is absolutely crucial to making sure we can provide security in large parts of the country and (pushing/putting ?) the Taliban and the necessary pressure to encourage some of them to desist from fighting and to look for a political settlement. Now, the political process is vital, too, and that is what now -- the opportunity exists to take that forward. President Karzai now has the legitimacy, given by the peace jirga in June, to take that forward. He's formed his high-level peace council. So political process is important; so is the economic capacity of Afghanistan. We have increased by 40 percent this year our development aid to Afghanistan. A key question is whether the Afghan government will effectively implement all the commitments they made at the Kabul conference in July -- which are good commitments, which are very good detailed plans for the building up of a(n) economic, financial capacity of the Afghan state. We really have to hold them to that. This is a major role for the United States, United Kingdom and allied countries over the next year to try to make sure those commitments are implemented. And that, of course, includes the building up of the Afghan national security forces to the point where they can lead and sustain all their own operations by 2014. And they are on track in building -- the good news is, as of now, they are slightly ahead of track in building up the Afghan army, and now it's more than 130,000 strong. So we are making progress. But it remains -- I don't want to kid anybody about this. This remains a phenomenal challenge. This remains one of the most difficult challenges anywhere in the world. The people from the United States, United Kingdom, who are working out there, not only in the armed forces but development workers and other people working there, are doing a phenomenal job in the most difficult circumstances. And we will only succeed if all of these things -- the military progress, the economic capacity-building and the political process -- are successful. So we have to do all of those things in order to succeed. But I think we are going forward, not back, at the moment. WHITMAN: A question there. QUESTIONER: I'm Alexandra Starr with the Center on Law and Security. I actually wanted to move a little bit to domestic politics, if you're okay with that. Obviously, there was an election over the weekend and Ed Miliband became Labour leader, with significant union support that was pivotal. And I was wondering if you could comment on how that might shape the opposition, when they're out of power and, I guess, potentially if they do go back into power in the years ahead. HAGUE: Mm-hmm. (Laughter.) Well. Disastrous for them, of course. (Laughs.) (Laughter.) No, well, I congratulate Ed Miliband on his election. It's been an extraordinary thing, really, an election between two brothers for the leadership of a political party. Now, it's a difficult job, as I well know, because after our own election defeat in 1997, I became leader of the opposition. In fact, I have an exchange of e-mails that I can tell you about with David Miliband -- I don't think he'll mind. After the election, he sent me a note saying "Congratulations on being foreign secretary; you've now got the best job in the government." And I sent one back saying, "Yes, thank you very much; you are applying for the worst job in the world" -- (laughter) -- which is the job of leader of the opposition in the British Parliament. So I'm sure it will be difficult in many ways. He will find it as a disadvantage that he was elected with trade union -- that the trade unions gave the decisive margin of support, because we're seeing in the British Labour Party a reassertion, really, of trade union activity and dominance. The vast majority of the Labour Party's funding in recent years has come from trade unions. Tony Blair had tried to move the Labour Party away from that, but it has moved back. I think the Labour Party is in danger of moving back, therefore, in many respects. I believe Ed Miliband has said in the last 24 hours that new Labour is dead. And that is -- that may be a problem for the Labour Party going forward, because it was new Labour that was elected, not old Labour, in the Blair period. So it remains to be seen how he will develop the Labour Party. The immediate debates will be about the spending. I've mentioned the need to reduce spending in the U.K. This is a fiscally conservative government in the U.K. In fact, it has been made possible, our coalition, because over time the Conservatives have become more socially liberal and the Liberals have become more fiscally conservative. And together, we have formed a socially liberal, fiscally conservative administration -- an interesting concept for the United States maybe. (Laughter.) QUESTIONER: Yes. HAGUE: And the -- but we are determined, therefore, to get the national finances in shape. We are reducing our spending by 83 billion pounds over the next few years. And we now want to know from the new leader of the Labor Party where he would cut the spending, in detail, since he did say when he was running for the leadership he would provide that information before the government publishes its information. So he's got three weeks now to provide his version of where we reduce government spending in Britain, given the shocking state that his party left the country in. But I think really, on an international platform, I won't go any further in a partisan way. (Laughter.) WHITMAN: We have a question here at the center. QUESTIONER: Ross Boutros (sp), New York University. Mr. Secretary, you have generously agreed to answer questions beyond the scope of your talk this morning. We would all be interested in your view on Middle East peace process, in which you have participated, particularly in the context of what has happened in the past 24 hours. HAGUE: Well, this is indeed a crucial area, and one on which some encouraging meetings have taken place. Everyone who has taken part in or witnessed the early meetings in Washington, in Sharm el-Sheikh, in Jerusalem over the last month, has said they went very well, and that the sincerity of both sides is very apparent. So there is some encouragement there. Clearly, we now have a problem in the expiring, without renewal so far, of the settlement moratorium last night. But we urge -- in the U.K., we urge very strongly the government of Israel to extend the settlement moratorium. And we have put that very strongly through the ministers. Our prime minister has communicated that to the Israeli prime minister. I will meet Mr. Lieberman, the Israeli foreign minister, in a few hours time here in New York and will strongly argue for this again. And I'll also meet Secretary Clinton at lunchtime to discuss where we are on this. But I think there is -- there's no new information I can give you about that at the moment. The moratorium has expired. The Arab League has an important meeting coming up on October 9th in Libya, which I think will be a crucial moment in this since the Palestinians are in the talks with the blessing of the Arab League. So I continue to believe that Israel should extend the settlement moratorium. In any case, in our view, all settlements in occupied territory are illegal, and should not be taking place at all. But even from a pragmatic point of view, I think it's in Israel's own best interests to extend the freeze. And their ministers generally say to us it is impossible to do so, but I will say it's entirely possible if they wanted to do so, and I still hope they will do so. I will put that case strongly to the Israeli foreign minister this afternoon. WHITMAN: A question in the back, please. QUESTIONER: Elizabeth Bramwell, Bramwell Capital. I wanted to ask a question about unilateral climate change or control. And if we do it unilaterally, you know, I think it has an impact on driving manufacturers to increasingly manufacture in China. And so, you know, here we are at 10 percent unemployment, and we have a billion -- whatever, trillion-six (dollars) deficit. And I just wonder how we should prioritize this. And if we were to unilaterally go forward, you know, how do you see manufacturing, as a percentage of the economy in the U.K. and England, going forward as, you know, part of the total? And ultimately, if we keep driving manufacturing out of this country, doesn't it have an impact on national security? HAGUE: Yes. If you lose your manufacturing sector, I think it does, and we strongly have that view in Britain as well. But we are very much of the view that embracing this low-carbon future is the way forward for manufacturing, and that (any ?) manufacturing that does not do so will rapidly be left out. This is the way to keep your manufacturing sector, because the market will move. You know, a few years ago, I and many British people unilaterally decided, "I was only going to buy a hybrid car." And we were then all buying Lexus cars, because that was the only one, from Japan. But that has now meant that British manufacturers are racing to develop their own hybrid cars and are about to bring them out in wide -- in a wide variety of models (in/and ?) Land Rover, Range Rover, whatever. So, actually you have to get in on the low-carbon technology if your manufacturing is going to succeed. Because if most of the rest of the world is going that direction and the United States isn't, well, then that will really hit U.S. manufacturing. So this is the future. This is the -- this is the way to go for successful manufacturing, not just (to be stoking the ?) manufacturing of the 20th century. WHITMAN: A question here. QUESTIONER: Hello. I'm Kassia Yanosek from Hudson Clean Energy Partners. My question actually is about process. You talked a lot about the need for political will in getting to a global deal, or something of that nature. But if you look at the process -- the U.N. process, in particular -- clearly there may be other fora that may be better negotiating bodies that can actually get closer to a solution. Could you speak to your view on the Major Economies Forum or some bilateral discussions that are going on, as to forum that are actually moving the ball forward? Thank you. HAGUE: Well, I think those things are all very, very useful. I've described the situation with the European Union, for one, is taking action together, and we wanted to take more action together. So there you have already the world's largest single market -- trading market, and 27 industrialized nations acting together. So, yeah, of course there is a strong role for other fora. But in the end, to have a binding global deal, which, as I said, then gives everybody the confidence to do this together, I think it has to be through the U.N. process. And yes, that may seem a little chaotic and unsatisfactory after the events of the last year, but I think we're now going about it in a different way. I have a lot of confidence in how Mexico has conducted this through this year, aiming for certain agreements, hopefully certain agreements at Cancun, on (funds ?), on adaptation, on technology, on forestation. So if we do that -- if the U.N. process can now add certain viable agreement and show that the Copenhagen Accords are being implemented, well, that then ultimately underpins a later global deal. So we're having to do it at a different pace, but I think it is very important to still do it -- for all the reasons I've set out in my speech earlier -- to do it on that U.N. basis and not to lose heart just because there was -- there were important setbacks at Copenhagen. But is there a big role for other -- for what we do bilaterally and in other multilateral fora? Absolutely there is. We should -- really, what I'm arguing here is we should use every channel of foreign policy to promote these objectives. WHITMAN: Well, in the interests of time, I think we have one more question, and I haven't been to this side of the room, so -- we'll go right here and then we need to wrap up, get everybody up on time. QUESTIONER: David Nachman from DLA Piper. Mr. Secretary, why do you suppose that the Senate and public opinion in this country generally do not share your sense of urgency or your sense of the opportunity in a low-carbon economy? And if you were to give advice to us here in the States, what two or three steps would you suggest could most rapidly and effectively turn that situation around? HAGUE: Hmm. I don't know. You can probably tell me better than I can tell you. I would say opinion is very mixed, from what I've seen in the United States. You know, it's -- I think it would be wrong to characterize the United States as full of people who deny all of this. But I think there is -- I imagine there is quite a lot of skepticism about whether other countries will meet their commitments. And maybe there is more skepticism here about whether climate change is taking place or is man-made. Perhaps that debate -- that -- there may not be as much acceptance of the science as there is in European countries. And there will -- has to be a rational debate. I don't think we should ever be dismissive, by the way, of that debate. I mean tolerance of people who have a different point of view, there's a proper argument to be had, but certainly from everything I've seen, it's very, very convincing. So we should always have that debate. So those may be among the obstacles. And I think it's -- I think the connection between economic opportunity and climate change has not been sufficiently well made. And it's really up to business and political leaders to make that connection for people, I think. Otherwise, people will see it as why should we lose out and make sacrifices, when China is, you know, emitting more and more per capita. And we have to explain that there's an opportunity here and that even China is doing certain things about it. So that is up to leaders to address that, also leaders across politics. I think one of the things that's worked in Britain is that leaders across the political spectrum have embraced this argument, and that it was a bit of a shock to people when the Conservative Party embraced it so strongly. But what is conservatism? It has to do with preserving the best and finest in the world, whether they be habits or institutions or environment. That should be an essential part of a conservative approach to life. And so we see it as a natural part of our conservative philosophy, and I hope American conservatives can (come to ?) view it in the same light. And I'm sure that would help a lot, as well. WHITMAN: Well, Minister, thank you very much for your time, given your incredible schedule. Thank you. (C) COPYRIGHT 2010, FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC., 1000 VERMONT AVE. NW; 5TH FLOOR; WASHINGTON, DC - 20005, USA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ANY REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION IS EXPRESSLY PROHIBITED. UNAUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION CONSTITUTES A MISAPPROPRIATION UNDER APPLICABLE UNFAIR COMPETITION LAW, AND FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. RESERVES THE RIGHT TO PURSUE ALL REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO IT IN RESPECT TO SUCH MISAPPROPRIATION. FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. IS A PRIVATE FIRM AND IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. NO COPYRIGHT IS CLAIMED AS TO ANY PART OF THE ORIGINAL WORK PREPARED BY A UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OFFICER OR EMPLOYEE AS PART OF THAT PERSON'S OFFICIAL DUTIES. FOR INFORMATION ON SUBSCRIBING TO FNS, PLEASE CALL CARINA NYBERG AT 202-347-1400. THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT.
  • United Kingdom
    Russell C. Leffingwell Lecture: The Diplomacy of Climate Change
    Play
    United Kingdom's foreign secretary, William Hague, discusses the urgency of an international climate deal in which all countries accept responsibility for climate change, enforce a more robust framework for high growth and low carbon economic models, and ensure a new sustainable pathway to prosperity and security.