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Dáil Éireann debate -
Wednesday, 14 May 2003

Vol. 566 No. 4

Written Answers. - Greenhouse Gas Emissions.

Jim O'Keeffe

Question:

149 Mr. J. O'Keeffe asked the Minister for the Environment and Local Government his views on the report of the European Environmental Agency that greenhouse gas emissions rose by 31% here at a time when substantial reductions were attained in other member states such as Germany and the UK; his further views on the fact that this could lead to substantial monetary penalties; and his further views on the fact that a major co-ordinated plan of campaign to confront this issue is necessary at this time. [12883/03]

John Gormley

Question:

150 Mr. Gormley asked the Minister for the Environment and Local Government if he will scrap the climate change strategy, and undertake a root and branch reform of the programme for Government to ensure compliance with the Kyoto Protocol, to avoid major fines, and to reduce the risk of future flooding and other extreme weather events. [13033/03]

Willie Penrose

Question:

160 Mr. Penrose asked the Minister for the Environment and Local Government the progress made to date in implementing the targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions agreed by Ireland under the Kyoto Agreement; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [12965/03]

Eamon Gilmore

Question:

178 Mr. Gilmore asked the Minister for the Environment and Local Government the action he intends to take arising from the publication of figures from the European Environment Agency showing that of the 15 members of the EU, Ireland had done the least to comply with the terms of the Kyoto Agreement; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [12948/03]

Bernard J. Durkan

Question:

248 Mr. Durkan asked the Minister for the Environment and Local Government the extent to which Ireland is compliant with the guidelines set at Kyoto; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [13165/03]

I propose to take Questions Nos. 149, 150, 160, 178 and 248 together.

The ultimate objective of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change – UNFCCC – is the stabilisation of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system, to be achieved within a time-frame sufficient, inter alia, to enable economic development to proceed in a sustainable manner. Thus, under the Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCCC all countries, including Ireland, negotiated a real, meaningful and challenging target that require going beyond business-as-usual. Given the complexity of the task, the time frame involved is 15 years, of which some five years have now elapsed.

Ireland has a Kyoto emissions growth limitation target of 13% over 1990 levels within the overall EU Kyoto reduction target of 8%, reflecting our contribution to the overall EU commitment and our need for economic develop ment. Our emissions of greenhouse gases were always expected to increase in the medium term, and we have ensured this was at a considerably slower rate than our unprecedented economic growth since the 1990s. Ireland is the most successful member state after Luxembourg in achieving a decoupling of emissions from economic growth since 1990. Emissions per unit of GDP are now 62% of what they were in 1990 compared to 78% for the EU as a whole.
Ireland, however, has now the highest levels of emissions growth within the EU, reaching 31% in 2001 over 1990 levels. The European Environment Agency has identified us as among ten of 15 member states significantly challenged in relation to achieving their agreed share of the EU's Kyoto target. The substantial reductions achieved by some member states followed significant and abrupt structural changes occurring for other reasons. Recent data indicate some erosion of reduction gains beginning to occur as emissions for the EU as a whole rose in 2001.
Our Kyoto obligations arise in the commitment period 2008-12. The Government's National Climate Change Strategy, published in November 2000, comprises a systematic programme towards meeting these obligations, and sets a ten-year policy framework for achieving the necessary emissions reductions.
A progress report on the implementation of the strategy was published in May 2002. While this shows that measures in place or in progress are capable of achieving approximately 20% of the reductions required to meet our Kyoto Protocol obligations, continuing emissions increases due to volume growth in the economy mean that implementation of the strategy must be intensified. In essence, there has been progress in decoupling emissions growth from economic development, but the task now is to intensify this decoupling.
Meeting our target is an important Government commitment, and I initiated a review of implementation of the strategy to ensure more focused and intensive implementation. I intend to publish the outcome of this review later in the year. I am satisfied that full implementation over the remainder of the decade, together with any additional measures which may be identified in the review, will ensure that our Kyoto obligations are fully met by the 2008-12 period, and any penalties are avoided.
The EPA environmental research programme under the national development plan includes a major report on scenarios and impacts of climate change in Ireland, and I expect this to be published shortly. This will provide a basis for the agencies responsible for long-term planning, and where adaptation to climate change is relevant, to factor in the inevitable changes with greater confidence. Meeting our Kyoto target will be an important contribution to global efforts to tackle climate change, and I am satisfied that it can only be through long-term sustained reductions glo bally that the expected effects of climate change in Ireland can be ameliorated.
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