| Climate Change: NZ Association of Scientists |
A DISCUSSION PAPER*David LillisDecember 2006
1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 A Shift in the Debate
The Climate Change and Governance Conference, held at Te Papa, Wellington, in March 2006, provided a necessary forum for international concern about an issue of the first importance. It also succeeded in placing New Zealand at centre stage in the international debate, and demonstrated that New Zealand is a nation that can play a significant part in the big geopolitical issues. Given the overwhelming preponderance of scientific opinion, the conference left those of us who attended in little doubt that climate change is real, and raised awareness that anthropogenic emissions are at least a partial cause. Now, at the beginning of the third millennium, the international community must take meaningful steps to limit the release, and mitigate the effects, of carbon dioxide and other harmful emissions through both technology and policy approaches, and develop a continuing capacity to adapt to climate change and its associated variability and instability. In 2005 the globally averaged concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (the main contributor to the Earth’s enhanced greenhouse effect) was about 380 parts per million (ppm). In the same year the concentration of atmospheric methane (the second most significant contributor to the Earth’s enhanced greenhouse effect) was about 1.8 ppm. Though a high per capita emitter, New Zealand produces only about 0.2% of the world’s greenhouse gases, so that even a major reduction in our emissions would make little difference to the global emissions budget. However, this fact is no reason for failing to act as a good global citizen. Mitigating climate change requires substantive reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions, both through minimising the world’s dependence on fossil fuels and through the adoption of alternative energy sources. As a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol, New Zealand is now poised to make significant contributions to addressing climate change through meaningful engagement in the ongoing policy debate, but also through its excellent science. 1.2.1 Climate Change as Just One Global Problem? 1.2.2 Global Carbon Dioxide Concentration Measurements The European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA) has provided an ice core that extends the carbon dioxide record back about 650,000 years2, some 210,000 years longer than the Vostok record3, which also provided valuable greenhouse gas information. The atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration is now about 36% greater than the pre-industrial (1750 A.D.) value of about 280 ppm, and possibly is higher than at any time over the last twenty million years4. Although the relative positions of the sun and the earth are thought to be the major driver of ice age cycles, the new core indicates a stable relationship between carbon dioxide, methane and Antarctic climate. For example, it shows that the concentrations of both gases were lower during relatively mild warm periods than during the hotter warm periods of the last 400,000 years. 1.2.3 Global Methane Concentration Measurements Atmospheric methane absorbs terrestrial infra-red radiation that would otherwise radiate into space. It is about 21 times more effective at warming the atmosphere than carbon dioxide by weight. Its short atmospheric chemical half-life (five - twelve years), and potency in absorbing infra-red, suggests that we can make real progress on climate change over the near term by addressing methane emissions6. The historic record indicates that methane is present in greater concentrations than at any previous time over the last 400,000 years7. The global average methane concentrations have increased 150% since 1750, but the overall rate of growth has slowed over the last decade. Atmospheric methane remained at a steady concentration (1.75 ppm) between 1999 and 20028. The reason for relative stability since 1999 is unclear, but isotopic analysis suggests that is unlikely to be due to draining of wetlands (David Lowe, pers. comm.). 1.2.5 Global Average Surface Temperature Record There is a concern that temperature measurements could have been biased by the development of towns and cities near the sites where temperatures are measured, as built environments retain more heat than rural areas. However, when the historic temperature record is separated into a set taken in calm weather and another in windy weather, no significant difference emerges12, even though warming effects due to nearby cities should be more pronounced in calm conditions, when wind cannot dissipate the heat. Thus, the proximity of towns and cities probably has no significant effect on the historic temperature record. However, while we have a high level of confidence that global mean temperatures were higher during the last decades of the twentieth century than previously13, less confidence can be placed on data from 900 A.D. to 1600 A.D (for which we have some historic observational records) and particularly on data prior to about 900 A.D. We recognise that proxy records of past temperatures, based on dendrochronology and the isotopic composition of snow, stalactites and corals (and even hard-to-calibrate historic data, such as the dates of grape harvests, diary records of frosts and heat-waves, and sea-ice-free periods in harbours), are more uncertain than instrumental observations. Careful averaging of proxy records to produce global or hemispheric records is required, and sophisticated data-reduction methods (such as principal components analysis) are used on regional records prior to incorporation within the global record. 1.2.6 Lower Atmosphere Temperature Records 1.2.7 Solar Cycles and Volcanic Eruptions 1.2.8 The Unknown Importance of Feedbacks Feedbacks that potentially could cool the earth include a reduced capacity of the oceans to absorb heat as the surface warms and the shading effect of certain pollutants, such as sulphate particles that produce acid rain. However, aerosols are transient in the atmosphere, so that current efforts to reduce pollution could give rise to further warming. 1.2.9 The Evidence is Overwhelming 2. RESPONDING TO CLIMATE CHANGE 2.1 A Probable International Response to Climate Change Technological innovation and adoption will be driven by the advanced industrial economies, and they will adopt higher environmental standards. Existing economic instruments, such as emissions trading, will be augmented by regulated technical standards and other mechanisms designed to reduce both the use of fossil fuels and the extent to which carbon transfer is embodied in products and services. However, it is quite possible that international agreement on binding emissions caps beyond 2012 will not be reached. If not, then nations that reduce their net emissions may act against those that do not, possibly by using technical standards as market access conditions or by imposing import tariffs on non-complying nations. Global emission reductions on a scale that will lead to stable and acceptable atmospheric concentrations are achievable only through major policy and behavioural changes on the part of the major emitters: USA, Europe, Japan and the developing economies of China, India and Brazil, whose emissions are growing rapidly. Already, behavioural change has begun in Europe, and Japan, Canada, Scandanavia and the European Union states are investing heavily in emission reduction initiatives. In 2006 the State of California passed the California Global Warming Solutions Act20, which requires major industrial polluters to reduce emissions by 25% by the year 2020. Stern21 argues that stabilising total greenhouse gas concentrations between 500 and 550 parts per million will require a 75% reduction in carbon emissions from the global power sector, widespread adoption of low emission transport, major increases in energy efficiency, advances in non-energy emissions, such as agricultural and industrial processes and deforestation, so that by 2050 total emissions per unit of GDP must be 25% of current international levels or less. In 2003 a British Government White Paper22 committed the United Kingdom (UK) to a 60% reduction in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emission levels by the year 2050, and in 2006 the UK’s Tyndall Centre suggested that cuts of 80% are necessary23. Eventually, the international community must address direct causality between demographics and concomitant energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Energy demand increases in tandem with population growth and, over the long term, addressing climate change may require constraints on population growth, as well as moves towards the provision of electricity based on renewable sources, such as hydro, tidal and wind energy. China is already taking early steps towards the increased use of renewables, and has made substantial investments in wind farms, aiming to produce 30 GW of wind power by 202024 (only about 2% of its projected annual electrical energy consumption for that year, but growing in significance thereafter as the relative costs of wind power reduce). Already, significant progress has been made in the development of tidal turbines, and Sir David King, Chief Scientist for the United Kingdom, has stated his belief that tidal energy can meet a significant fraction of the future energy needs of the United Kingdom25. Scotland’s Marine Energy Group estimates the potential future contribution of tidal power to Scotland’s energy consumption at fully ten per cent26. 2.2 Climate Change as Scientific and Technological Opportunity Alternative energy sources will probably include established or emerging technologies, such as hydro, geothermal, wind, tidal power and nuclear fission, but ongoing advances in energy production and efficiency may prove to be highly important. Likely sources also include new generation technologies, such as marine and bio-energy (e.g. cost-efficient production of ethanol from ligno-cellulosic biomass), photovoltaics, and hybrid vehicles that plug in and feed back to the national grid. Renewable electricity can replace coal-fired power generation, though hydrogen fuel cell technology will have significant levels of embodied carbon if derived from fossil fuels, and will require renewable electricity for the extraction of hydrogen from water if it is to make a viable contribution. Nuclear fusion may be very difficult to achieve, and for the moment there are genuine concerns about both the long term safety and the cost-effectiveness of nuclear fission. Much research is needed before we can be sure of the long run reliability of nuclear plant and infrastructure. However, major international research programmes, such as the International Thermonuclear Reactor (ITER) joint international research and development Tokamak project27, will determine the potential of nuclear fusion for the supply of energy to national grids. ITER is to be constructed in Cadarache, in the South of France, a joint project between the European Union, Japan, China, India, the Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation and the USA. If fusion proves technically successful, affordable and safe, then eventually we stand to gain practically unlimited, emission-free electrical energy for the foreseeable future. 2.3 Generating Wider Economic Benefits However, the international community can only afford to aim for wider socio-economic benefits because the world is still at an early stage in the development and understanding of climate change. Global warming may lead to soil loss, desertification and over-grazing, deforestation, disruption of the Gulf Stream and other thermo-haline currents, ocean acidification and associated impacts on marine ecosystems, melting of ice caps (leading to reduction in reflectivity and concomitant increase in energy absorption and acceleration of warming), sea-level rise and other major irreversible changes. In turn, these changes may lead to agricultural and environmental problems (including crop failures), disrupted energy demand and supply, coastal erosion and flooding events, storm damage, disruption of industries and the establishment of new pathways for disease (including malaria) and pest incursion. Stern21 believes that inaction could lead to the loss of at least five per cent of global GDP annually, and possibly up to 20%. Responsible precautionary action is already crucial, even in the absence of full scientific certainty of climate change and its implications. A century from now, the problem may have become very pervasive indeed, exceeding even our most pessimistic projections, and already one estimate puts the number of deaths from the effects of climate change at 160,000 annually25. If the international community does not make serious efforts to mitigate and adapt, then many people may die or suffer extreme hardship because of loss of arable land, increased frequency and severity of droughts or increased incidence of pests and diseases, and the costs of protecting cities and coastal infrastructure will mount steadily. 2.4 New Zealand’s Response New Zealand is rapidly achieving consensus on potential solutions, but failure to realise the required level of consensus could result in enduring inconsistencies between energy, land use and climate change policy, resulting partly from continuing ideological opposition to certain forms of Government intervention (e.g. Government involvement in forest growing, technical regulation of vehicle emissions and energy-efficient building standards). Today, it has become increasingly important that all nations recognise the economic transformation, business and sustainable development opportunities potentially on offer within the Kyoto framework and beyond. As a small economy, New Zealand is unlikely to contribute significantly to the international climate change response, except in policy leadership, in a few niche science and technology applications, and in the provision of necessary palaeo-climate research and land-based and ocean-based observations. Therefore, we must be informed by the policy responses of the big emitters and those with the economic and technological capability to address the issues meaningfully. However, while New Zealand’s science and technology capacity is limited, we can influence other nations for the greater good, partly by relying on a profile that is credible within the international community because of our contributions to human rights, nuclear and conservation issues. We can assume leadership in aspects of climate change research in which we already have a competitive advantage. The Hon. Simon Upton, Chair of the International Round Table on Sustainable Development, has pointed out that our enteric methane programme is a leading programme in its field30. Though the future impacts of this programme and related research on global emissions are unpredictable, such programmes can only enhance New Zealand’s scientific profile and credibility as a negotiating partner. This outstanding programme, and others (for example, in animal and plant genetics and soil science), deserve to be recognised and promoted as premier examples of New Zealand’s high quality niche research base. New Zealand can also assume a leadership position in forward-looking land use policy. Government may have a significant role to play in the future development of forestry, supporting afforestation and reforestation and encouraging forest biodiversity. There is real potential for enhanced management and control of soil erosion and flood events, and we can improve water quality and nutrient management on farms, optimising the use of fertilizers and other agrichemicals and reducing nitrogen application on New Zealand’s soils.
Several key principles could underpin New Zealand’s ongoing policy response, taking due account of our small economy and low investment in research, science and technology, but also taking advantage of our international credibility as environmentally conscious and prepared to articulate a balanced position on political issues. 3.1 Support Excellent Climate Change Research Growing for Good31 (a 2004 report from New Zealand’s Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment) states that a broad, systemic approach is necessary for the achievement of sustainable farming (see section 3.3.2), including education, strategy development and implementation, and new research, science and technology. Specifically, New Zealand’s research community can address a wide range of relevant bio-physical and socio-economic problems, including new farm management systems, integrated catchment management systems, soil ecosystems, water quality and abstraction, the impacts of farming intensification, the impacts of land use change (in particular, the impact of new systems on soils not yet used for such systems), the impacts of pollution and animal waste, improved nutrient management (including more efficient application of fertilizers and other agrichemicals), embodied energy in products and services, and the impacts on agriculture of, and adaptation to, long term climate change. Additionally, economics and social research could provide new and relevant understandings of rural communities and around the supply chain drivers that lead to farming intensification and increased environmental impact (e.g. the impact of domestic and international supermarket chains on New Zealand farming systems and behaviours, the dynamics of domestic and international markets, and the behaviours of processors, exporters and other stakeholders). New Zealand should support greater investment in energy-related research that coheres with our science and technology capabilities and potential commercial opportunities in areas such as hydro and micro-hydro generation, wind power, geothermal, co-generation using wood waste, low emission bio-fuels and energy-efficient building and construction. Our investments could prove particularly effective if incentives are provided for energy generation at the level of the small farm and family dwelling. Above all, currency with overseas research (especially with advances in carbon capture and storage) will be crucial. New Zealand could also benefit substantially from the acquisition of a cross-government Geospatial Information Systems capability that supports necessary policy and research relating to biosecurity, civil defence and emergency management, agriculture and the environment. 3.2 Harmonise Climate Change Policy with Energy Policy 3.2.1 Take Meaningful Action Naturally, governments must initiate stepwise, measured climate change initiatives that minimise economic impacts over the short term. However, there is a great risk that governments around the world focus on short term, relatively minor palliatives. To make the necessary progress, New Zealand must direct attention at coal-fired thermal power stations and transport fuels - the big emitters of fossil carbon. Coal-powered generation should be progressively and rapidly eliminated and carbon capture and storage technology developed and adopted widely. Having stopped burning coal ourselves, we must then consider the ethics of continuing to export coal for others to burn. Government’s proposal32 to require oil companies to introduce a minimum of 2.25% bio-fuels in transport fuels by 2012 is a significant political first step but will have minor impact on emissions. This very low proportion should be increased substantially in the future. Substitution of small, efficient vehicles and diversion of freight onto an electrified rail system would be good starting points, consistent with a policy of taxing polluters while subsidizing compliers. Registration fees related to vehicle engine size or directly to emissions, paid for by higher fuel taxes, would help. Introducing taxes on air travel and long distance road freight in order to subsidize rail and sea transport would reduce fuel use and road congestion, while lower road speeds would reduce both fuel use and the accident rate. Making public transport more efficient, cheaper (with respect to private transport) and more user-friendly could persuade many people to leave their cars at home. Rewards for using low emission vehicles in general and encouraging acceptance of hybrid vehicles, and ultimately of battery-powered vehicles, would be useful. Improved insulation and solar water heating on new buildings would increase comfort and reduce energy use. From a long term perspective, agriculturally-induced releases of methane and nitrous oxide are less important issues than carbon dioxide. Both methane and nitrous oxide are greenhouse gases, but both are transient in the atmosphere (methane reverts to bio-carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide to nitrogen). New Zealand’s emissions of both gases are increasing because of continuing intensification of farming, particularly dairying. Intensification of agriculture proceeds unabated, partly because the costs of atmospheric and water pollution are externalised. Internalizing these costs could make much dairying unprofitable and would have severe political costs, but it is highly important that New Zealand finds new ways of curbing agricultural emissions without reducing profitability significantly. Forests remove significant amounts of carbon dioxide. However, when felled and processed, some of the carbon is re-released. Permanent forest absorbs carbon dioxide while growing, but a mature forest is carbon neutral. Planting trees is beneficial in many respects, but forestry provides only a partial solution to the carbon problem. The most effective long term solution is either a massive reduction in the use of fossil carbon or the development of carbon capture and storage, and ultimately all nations must aspire to one or other of these objectives. 3.2.2 Government’s 2006 Draft Policy Proposals It is clear that New Zealand’s climate change policy must harmonise with energy policy in order to achieve the desired reductions. New Zealand’s carbon dioxide emissions per unit of power generated are very low by comparison to those of other developed nations, and some 70% of our electricity is derived from renewable sources, mainly hydro and some geothermal and wind. Government’s Sustainable Development Programme of Action37 identifies the energy challenges and opportunities facing New Zealand, and discusses possible future directions for policy development. It also identifies energy as a critical area for action, given that energy supply and demand have significant economic, social and environmental impacts. A possible peak in oil production is of great concern, requiring immediate consideration of alternative fuel sources. A second concern is the generation of undesirable externalities, including direct environmental impacts and global climate change. If we are to achieve true social, economic and environmental sustainability, our future energy systems must be priced fairly and efficiently, reflecting current and projected scarcity or abundance of energy resources and the relative production and distribution costs, and exert minimal environmental impact. 3.2.4 Engage Actively in the Agreed Economic Measures Over the short term, New Zealand may be correct in not imposing a carbon tax, partly because of the unfavourable market distortion that could occur if one nation does so when as yet most of its trading partners do not. However, the long run effects of market distortion could prove much less costly than the impacts of protectionism and damage to our national brand, and for this reason New Zealand may have a strong incentive to advocate carbon taxes. Economic measures, such as taxes and incentives, are often effective in moderating the behaviours of industries and nations, and discouraging emitters using differential taxes may eventually prove to be an effective way of moving them towards low carbon activity. In 2002, Government announced the introduction in 2007 of a revenue-neutral tax on petrol, diesel, coal and gas, and on carbon-emitting industrial processes, such as cement manufacture. At that time the economic impact on an average household from higher cost electricity, petrol and other fuels was estimated at only four dollars per week. However, in 2005 the idea was discarded on advice that the proposed tax would fail to reduce emissions to the required extent and that New Zealand could achieve substantive reductions through forestry, wind generation and other means. The decision not to proceed with the tax may have been based on sound considerations of its likely effectiveness in reducing emissions and the probable negative effects of market distortion, but what will be the consequences for humanity a century from now if every nation adopts constrained measures, thinking primarily of maximising present wealth rather than of the future welfare of the world? 3.2.5 Assess All Costs and Benefits 3.2.6 Develop an Adaptation Strategy 3.2.7 Provide Enduring Commitment 3.3 Harmonise Climate Change Policy with Environmental Policy 3.3.1 Work Towards Sustainable Economic Development Central to a successful international climate change response will be sustainable economic development that enables future generations to inherit a world with a functional, life-giving biophysical environment. Responsible nations will implement change in which the exploitation of resources, technological development and human capital, labour and other institutional policies are directed towards the needs of future generations. Sustainable economic development will also recognise that a degree of continuing environmental impact is inevitable if humankind is to live beyond subsistence level. However, true sustainable development will only be achievable if responsible behaviour is encouraged actively, consumption patterns moderated, and the creation of undesirable externalities discouraged. 3.3.2 Work Towards Sustainable Agriculture Growing for Good30 discusses recent trends across New Zealand’s dairying, horticulture, sheep, beef and viticulture industries, and concludes that our natural capital is under considerable pressure. For example, between 1994 and 2002 the number of dairy cows increased by over 30%, whereas the land area used for dairying increased by only 10%. In that period, synthetic fertilizer application across all agricultural industries increased by over 20% and, in particular, the amount of nitrogen applied on agricultural land more than doubled40. Thus, New Zealand’s waterways and lakes are becoming nutrient-enriched and degraded from excess nitrogen, animal waste and eroded sediment, and agricultural nitrous oxide and methane now make up about half of New Zealand’s total emissions (see section 3.2.2). Growing for Good notes that many of our key export markets in Europe and Asia may not accept products sourced from farms that pollute the environment. The report recommends dialogue around a new vision for the future of farming; the establishment of a pan-sector agency to articulate and implement the vision; immediate action to remedy pollution from farms, to manage the use of nitrogen fertilisers, and to deal with contamination of waterways; and more research into sustainable farming systems, integrated catchment management and soils. A key challenge is the development and adoption of sustainable farming systems that maintain and enhance New Zealand’s natural capital. We now recognise that sound environmental behaviours, including water and soil management, appropriate agrichemical and energy use and waste disposal, are crucial for the future of agriculture. Sustainable farming practices will reduce direct environmental impact and help to maintain international market access by enhancing New Zealand’s profile as an environmentally-conscious nation and trading partner. Most importantly, sustainable farming will contribute directly to our climate change response by reducing the embodied energy within agricultural goods and services, through increased animal productivity and concomitant reduction in methane emissions, and lower nitrogen emissions from soils because of efficient fertilizer application.
Human-induced climate change is a reality. However, New Zealand enjoys advantages that potentially can assure strong economic performance as Kyoto and later agreements impact on the major emitters. Enlightened and integrated measures, that take account of New Zealand’s potential for renewable energy and that build on strong domestic and international research, science and technology, will ensure that New Zealand continues to prosper, retains a clean environment, plays an active role, and is perceived as a credible trading partner. The international community must now accept the overwhelming preponderance of scientific evidence that points to continually increasing concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases. In decades to come, it may be our children, or more probably the children of the third world, who pay the price for inaction on the part of our generation. We must remember our responsibilities, not only to each other, but also to the wider world of which we are a part. It must now be the humanitarian within us that dictates the course of our future actions, and ours must be the actions of the sentient and concerned global citizen, placing the welfare of the present and future world securely above our own selfish ambitions.
RECOMMENDATIONS 1. Provide ongoing support to New Zealand’s excellent climate change and related environmental research. 2. Provide ongoing support to policy around sustainable economic development and sustainable agriculture. 3. Develop climate change policy that generates wider economic and environmental benefits over the medium term; thereafter focus primarily on eliminating emissions through both technology and policy approaches. 4. Adopt and adapt overseas technology, such as carbon capture and storage. 5. Maintain open dialogue on the merits of carbon taxes as one means of encouraging low carbon behaviour and generating revenues which can support the development of renewable energy sources. 6. Attempt to influence the international community to behave as good global citizens, seeking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental externalities by adopting low emission behaviours and new technologies. 7. Develop a cross-Government Geospatial Information Systems capability to underpin policy and research around biosecurity, civil defence and emergency management, agriculture and the environment. New Zealand Association of Scientists E-mail: This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1. New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory, 1990-2004. Ministry for the Environment. http://www.climatechange.govt.nz/resources/reports/nir-apr06/html/page2.html 2. Siegenthaler et al, Stable Carbon Cycle-Climate Relationship During the Late Pleistocene, Science 25 November 2005, Vol. 310, no. 5752, pp 1313-1317. 3. Pearson, P. N., and Palmer, M. R., Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentrations over the past 60 million years. Nature, 2000, Vol’ 406, pp 695-699. 4. Vostok Ice Core. NOAA Satellite and Information Service. 5. A Record of the Atmospheric Methane Sink from Formaldehyde in Polar Ice Cores. Stafffelbach, T., Neftel, A, Stauffer, B and Jacob, D. Nature, 349, 603-605. 6. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Methane: Science. 7. Climate Change Science: An Analysis of Some Key Questions (2001). Committee on the Science of Climate Change. Division on Earth and Life Studies, National Research Council. 8. Atmospheric Methane Levels off: Temporary Pause or a New Steady State? Dlugokencky, E. J., Houweling, S. L., Bruhwiler, K. A., Masarie, P. M., Lang, J. B., Miller,1 and P. P. Tans. 9. New Scientist, 24 July 2004, p 44. 10. Climate Change 2001; The Scientific Basis, IPCC 2001. Eds. J Houghton et al, Cambridge University Press, Figure 1a. 11. Axford, I. Climate Change: Reflections on the Science. Reproduced in ‘Confronting Climate Change: Critical Issues for New Zealand’, pp 61. Ralph Chapman, Jonathan Boston and Margot Schwass (Eds). Victoria University Press. 14. Carl A. Mears and Frank J. Wentz 15. Climate Change: Menace or Myth, Fred Pearce, New Scientist.com News Service, 12 February 2005. 16. Monbiot, George. Heat: How to Stop the Planet Burning. Allen Lane. 17. Both measurements were reported in New Scientist, 20 August 2005, pp 10. 18. Oreskes, Naiomi. Beyond the Ivory Tower: The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change. Science, Vol’ 306, 5702, pp 1686; 3 December 2004, 19. Copenhagen Consensus Centre: http://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/Default.aspx?ID=675 20. California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 – Cutting Pollution while Strengthening the Economy. Environmental Entrepreneurs. 21. Stern Review: The Economics of Climate Change. HM Treasury. 22. Energy and Climate Change - Energy White Paper, 2006: Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. 23. Growth Scenarios for EU and UK Aviation: contradictions with Climate Policy. Anderson, K., Bows, A., and Upham, P. Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research. http://www.tyndall.ac.uk/publications/working_papers/wp84.pdf 24. Scramble for China’s Wind Power Market Heats Up. Reuters, 28 June,2006. http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/37024/story.htm 25. Global Warming: The Imperatives for Action from the Science of Climate Change. Plenary Address to the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Sir David King, Seattle, Washington, February 13, 2004. 28. Steve Hatfield-Dodds (2006). Reducing Greenhouse Emissions: Interpreting the Economic Impacts. Reproduced in ‘Confronting Climate Change: Critical Issues for New Zealand’. Ralph Chapman, Jonathan Boston and Margot Schwass (Eds). Victoria University Press. 29. California’s Global Warming Solution. John Doerr, Time Magazine, 3 September, 2006. 30. What can a small country do to influence the course of human-induced climate change? Hon. Simon Upton, Climate Change Conference, Wellington, 2006. 31. Growing for good: Intensive farming, sustainability and New Zealand’s environment. Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment. http://www.pce.govt.nz/reports/allreports/1_877274_45_3.shtml#download 32. www.transport.govt.nz/biofuels-sales-obligation-discussion-document/ 33. Transitional Measures – A Discussion Paper. Ministry of Economic Development, 2006 34. Powering Our Future: Towards a Sustainable Low Emissions Energy System (Draft). Ministry of Economic Development, 2006 35. New Zealand Energy Efficiency and Conservation Strategy (Draft). Ministry of Economic Development, 2006. 36. World Energy Outlook 2005: International Energy Agency. 37. Sustainable Development Programme of Action: Ministry for the Environment. http://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/sus-dev/sus-dev-programme-of-action-jan03.html 38. Patzek, T. W.; Pimentel, D. Thermodynamics of energy production from biomass. 39. Pimentel, D., Patzek, T. W. (Cornell University and University of California, Berkeley) 40. This personal calculation is based on the available information on quantities of nitrogen-based fertlizers imported and exported and their nitrogen contents, and information on urea produced domestically and used within industry.
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