http://www.newsinenglish.no/2016/06/29/norway-fails-to-cut-emissions/
Norway still fails to cut its emissions
June 29, 2016
While several other countries in the European Union have cut their
carbon emissions in half, they’ve increased in oil-producing Norway. One
critic claims Norwegian politicians have been opposed in principle to
making cuts for many years, and none will occur any time soon.
A new report from the European Environment Agency (EEA) confirms how
poorly Norway is doing in cutting its own emissions. Norway has long
favoured paying other countries to cut emissions while failing to do so
itself.
According to the EEA report, Norway’s carbon emissions increased by 2.4
percent between 1990 and 2014. Newspaper Dagsavisen reported Wednesday
that overall emissions in the EU declined by 24.4 percent in the same
period.
Several countries cut their emissions by half, with Lithuania doing the
best by reducing them by 59.6, followed closely by Latvia, Romania,
Slovakia and Bulgaria.
Marius Holm, leader of the environmental group Zero, noted that it’s not
fair to directly compare those countries’ cuts with Norway because they
still had old industrial plants and used lots of coal as a holdover from
their years as part of the Soviet Union. They’ve since eliminated much
of that, Holm that, which accounts for their impressive emission cuts
statistics.
Neighbours also shame Norway
“But it’s relevant to compare Norway to our neighbours,” he added, and
then Norway still compares badly. Denmark, for example, has cut
emissions by 27.6 percent, Sweden by 24.4 percent and Finland by 17.1
percent, while Norway’s emissions have risen.
“In these countries, there are firm policies to cut emissions,” Holm
told Dagssavisen. “Norway could have done the same. Instead there’s been
political focus on buying climate quotas, even though they don’t work.”
It’s not just Norway’s oil and gas industry that’s to blame. Emissions
from vehicular traffic, for example, have increased despite record sales
of electric cars. Such emissions have also increased in the EU, as have
emissions from use of air conditioning systems.
News last week that Oil & Energy Minister Tord Lien wants to delay
carbon capture and storage facilities by another two years, in the hopes
their costs will come down, will further delay emissions cuts. Despite
strict and unpopular new measures to limit driving in Oslo, city
politicians can’t hope to reduce emissions in Oslo until carbon capture
and storage is finally in place at the city’s garbage processing and
thermal power plant at Klemetsrud.
City seeks funds for Klemetsrud
Now the city is lobbying hard for state funds to ensure the earliest
possible opening of a carbon capture and storage facility at Klemetsrud.
“We have said all along we rely on cooperation and contributions from
the state,” city government leader Raymond Johansen of the Labour Party
told newspaper Aftenposten.
The state will decide which of three industrial sites will get carbon
capture and storage facilities first: Klemetsrud, Norcem’s cement plant
in Brevik or Yara’s ammonia plant in Porsgrunn. Feasibility studies show
they can be built at all three sites, with actual cost estimates due
later this summer.
Aftenposten also pointed out on Wednesday that since the City of Oslo
won’t be needing state guarantees to pay for a Winter Olympics in 2022,
after the state shot down that project based on high costs and lack of
public support, perhaps some of the money the city would have spent on
sports facilities can be channeled into helping to reserve climate
change instead.
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