OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría held a lecture on 3 July on the topic "What's changed, what hasn't and what we can do about it... 6 months to #COP2". The lecture was chaired by Professor Lord Nicholas Stern hosted by the London School of Economics and Aviva Investors in association with ClimateWise.
Gurría discussed how governments should rethink the role of coal in energy supply as the scale of new investments being made in unabated coal-fired electricity generation poses the most urgent threat to our climate.
Gurría stressed in a lecture that countries should conduct a more rigorous evaluation of the true costs of coal. With prices failing to fully account for the environmental, health and financial costs of coal, many of the coal plants being built today may have to be shut down before the end of their economic lifetimes.
More broadly, countries’ contributions to emissions reductions post-2020 are not consistent with a 2⁰C pathway, Gurría warned. (read the full speech)
He said the carbon clock is ticking and the Paris COP21 climate conference in December must give a clear and credible signal that governments are determined to go for a higher level of ambition.
“The mitigation contributions currently tabled by countries do not get us to where we need to be by 2030. Calling something a process doesn’t guarantee an outcome. We have been in a process for over 20 years and so far the commitments simply don’t add up,” he said.
Continued investment in coal is one of many ‘misalignments’ between climate goals and countries’ policies in other domains. A new report published by the OECD, the International Energy Agency, the Nuclear Energy Agency and the International Transport Forum, Aligning Policies for a Low-carbon Transition, reveals how policy misalignments undermine climate action in areas from tax to trade, electricity market regulation and land use.
Gurría urged governments to diagnose and consider what needs to be done to resolve such misalignments, starting by demanding that each ministry regularly report on which of its policies run counter to desirable climate outcomes.
Download the full report for free. More information on Aligning Policies for a Low-carbon Transition.
More on OECD climate change work and COP21 preparations.