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Do you know your leakage from your sink?



#COP27 and the language of decarbonisation!


Whether you are a fan or a detractor, we all get drawn into the commentary on COP. This year's event in Egypt is no different, but do we all understand what is being said? So to help, we decided to look at the language and how to decipher it.


While jargon is a curse in any industry sector, for Climate Action, the terms corporates, scientists and governments use are essential as we all need to understand what is going on, in simple terms, to make the best decisions for our organisations and individual living.


Fortunately, Raconteur has put together a nifty glossary of key terms, from root causes of our environmental issues, such as 'Afforestation' and 'Leakage', to actionable solutions, like 'Carbon Sequestration' and 'Rewilding'. These and many more have been simplified into bite-sized chunks to make unclear definitions clear and coherent.


It's a beneficial resource for those wanting to understand better the terminology that has led to the goals for this year's summit: Mitigation, Adaptation, Finance, and Collaboration.


To make it simple, we have listed them here as a handy guide.


Adaptation

This is the process of making changes to protect communities against the impacts of extreme and less predictable weather that’s already resulting from global warming. It can include measures such as taking out climate insurance; altering what crops are grown in an area; and building infrastructure such as flood defences.

Mitigation


This refers to efforts to lower the volume of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. It can involve either reducing emissions – such as by using less fossil fuel and switching to renewable energy sources – or enhancing sinks that can remove gases from the air, including forests or artificial carbon-capture systems.

Climate finance

This refers to money set aside to fund mitigation and adaptation projects around the world. These rarely come cheap, of course. Even wealthy countries will struggle to fund such measures, let alone the many emerging economies that are already experiencing the most extreme weather. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, rich countries committed $83.3bn in 2020 to help poorer nations deal with the “loss and damage” they had experienced (breaking an earlier pledge to provide £100bn a year by that point). Denmark was the first country to pledge specific compensation to countries most affected by climate change. 1.5 degrees

A 1.5C limit on the rise in the Earth’s average temperature above pre-industrial levels was enshrined in the UN’s 2015 Paris agreement. Projections from its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) suggest that increases above this level would cause some of the worst effects of climate change to become commonplace, putting billions of people at risk and causing irreversible environmental damage. Research indicates that the planet has already warmed by 1.1C, according to the IPCC.

Afforestation and reforestation

Reforestation means returning land that was previously tree-covered back to its original state. Afforestation is the creation of new woodland. Both are widely regarded as powerful mitigation measures.

Anthropocene

The geological history of the Earth is divided into epochs. The current epoch, the Holocene, began roughly 11,500 years ago at the end of an ice age. Some scientists have started suggesting that humans have made such enormous changes to the planet over the past 60 years that it has entered a new epoch: the Anthropocene.

Biodiversity

The variety of life on Earth, covering species ranging from a bacterium all the way up to a blue whale. This is in steep decline in several territories. The UK, for instance, has lost about half of its biodiversity in the modern era, making it one of the most nature-depleted countries.

Biofuel

A fuel made from organic matter over a short time span (as opposed to the long-term processes that create fossil fuels such as coal and gas). Biofuel includes wood as well as bioethanol and biodiesel made from crops, waste oil and algae. Many emit relatively few net greenhouse gases when burnt, but they can have other negative environmental impacts.

Carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM)

The CBAM is an import tax on carbon-intensive products such as steel, aluminium, cement and fertiliser. It’s part of the EU’s strategy to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030. The system is designed to level the playing field for EU-based companies, helping them to remain competitive with firms from jurisdictions that might not operate to such strict targets.

Carbon capture and storage

The process of capturing, transporting and storing carbon dioxide from a large emitting source, such as a power plant or industrial facility, before it enters the atmosphere. The storage process, sometimes referred to as sequestration, often involves injecting the CO2 deep underground.

Carbon capture and utilisation

A process of collecting carbon dioxide from one source and reusing it to produce a new product. Although this process doesn’t remove carbon from the atmosphere, recycling the CO2 can turn a carbon-intensive process into a carbon-neutral one.

Carbon credits

Carbon credits can be earned through offsetting, with each certified credit representing an emissions reduction equivalent to one tonne of carbon dioxide. These credits can then be purchased by a company or country to count towards its own carbon-reduction goals.

Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e)

A measurement used to group greenhouse gases based on their warming potential. Using this measurement helps to account for the emissions of all gases that contribute to the heating of the planet, such as methane and nitrous oxide, by calculating the amount of carbon dioxide that would cause the same amount of warming.

Carbon footprint

A carbon footprint can refer to the amount of carbon emitted by a company over a given period, the lifetime of a product or an individual’s actions — travelling by air, for instance.

Carbon intensity

The amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of electricity generated. Cleaner fuels have a lower carbon intensity. The term can also refer to the level of emissions a country or company produces relative to its economic output.

Carbon neutral

Becoming carbon neutral can be achieved by removing or eliminating the same amount of greenhouse gas emitted into the atmosphere. This is also sometimes referred to as being net zero.

Carbon offsetting

This refers to an organisation’s attempt to compensate for its carbon dioxide emissions by funding efforts to remove the equivalent amount from the atmosphere elsewhere. This often involves a third party, which is paid to perform the decarbonising action in return for carbon credits. Common carbon offsets include planting trees or funding projects to generate renewable energy. It is often used in areas of the economy that are hard to decarbonise, such as air travel.

Carbon sequestration

The process of capturing and storing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it in a solid or liquid form (see carbon capture and storage). It is a method of reducing or reversing the impact of CO2 pollution and mitigating the effects of climate change.

Certified emission reductions (CERs)

These are carbon credits issued by the UN to countries for projects that mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Countries can trade CERs to help them meet their emission reduction goals. For example, China could buy credits earned by a reforestation project in Kenya and use these to offset its own emissions.

Citizens’ assembly

A representative group of lay people who gather to discuss government policy in a particular area and recommend new measures. They have been used in Ireland and Spain to address climate change and are widely promoted by groups such as Extinction Rebellion as a way to reach a consensus on solutions.

Climate justice

Climate justice is the recognition that climate change will not affect everyone equally. People who are young, poor, marginalised and living in developing countries are among those least responsible for the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, yet they will tend to feel the worst effects of global warming and climate change.

Climate positive

Climate positive status is an improvement on net zero, in that the amount of carbon dioxide an entity is removing from the atmosphere exceeds what it’s emitting.

Climate reparations

This is a key demand of the climate justice movement. Many argue that developed countries should pay nations in the Global South to help them prepare for the worst consequences of climate change.

Climate tech

This term refers to advanced technologies that are being designed and developed to help decarbonise the global economy. It’s often applied to startups in the field.

COP27

The 27th annual Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will be held on 6-18 November. Climate experts, campaigners and policy-makers will convene at Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, to discuss how best to avert the worst effects of climate change.

Emissions trading scheme (ETS)

Also known as cap and trade, an emissions trading scheme sets a limit on the maximum amount of emissions and issues permits that companies can buy or trade. This creates a carbon market intending to encourage firms to reduce their emissions. The EU ETS is the world’s largest, while the UK has operated its own scheme since January 2021.

Energy charter treaty (ECT)

An international treaty was signed in 1991 to promote collaboration among countries with a large stake in the energy industry, especially the fossil fuels sector. Because it allows investors to sue for lost profits owing to government policy changes, it has come under fire for obstructing national efforts to combat climate change. Several European countries – most recently, France – have declared their intention to pull out of the agreement.

Energy transition

The global effort to move from fossil fuels and other non-renewables to cleaner sources of energy, such as wind, solar and green hydrogen.

Greenwashing

This is the pejorative term applied to a marketing campaign that’s designed to draw attention to an entity’s sustainable practices and, often, distract from its more environmentally damaging behaviour.

Greenhouse gases

These are compounds that contribute to global warming through the greenhouse effect when they are emitted into the atmosphere. The Kyoto protocol concerns the emission of carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, sulphur hexafluoride and members of both the hydrofluorocarbon and perfluorocarbon groups.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

The IPCC is the UN’s body for providing scientific assessments of climate change. It was created to give policy-makers regular updates on the implications and potential future risks of climate change and to suggest possible adaptation and mitigation measures. The panel’s most recent report was described as a “code red for humanity” by the UN’s secretary-general, António Guterres.

Just Transition

Many organisations agree that it’s important for the energy transition to happen in a socioeconomically fair way. For instance, coal miners left out of a job should be supported to retrain and find new work. The EU has allocated €150m (£131m) to its just transition fund.

Kyoto protocol

Signed at COP3 in 1997, the Kyoto protocol was an international treaty committing all signatories to reduce the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Coming into force in 2005, it was the first pact of its kind to set national governments legally binding targets. It was superseded by the Paris agreement in 2015.

Leakage

While it sounds like it refers to gas or oil escaping a pipeline, leakage has a specific meaning in environmental terms. It happens when one country’s climate policies result in higher greenhouse gas emissions in another. For example, many western countries have reduced their carbon footprints by moving polluting industries abroad.

Loss and damage

The negative effects experienced as a result of climate change. It has been claimed that some countries have already lost a fifth of their wealth as a result of extreme weather, for example.

Natural capital

A way to describe a country's wealth in terms of natural resources such as fertile soil, fresh water, clean air and biodiverse habitat. It has been argued that this should be measured, like GDP or financial assets, to encourage governments to conserve nature.

Net zero

Net zero refers to the point at which the amount of greenhouse gas emitted into the atmosphere equates to the amount removed.

Ocean acidification

A side effect of climate change, in which the increasing absorption of carbon dioxide by the world’s oceans is lowering their pH. In other words, they have become about 30% more acidic than they were in the pre-industrial era. This has damaged a wide range of marine ecosystems.

Paris Agreement

A legally binding international treaty that was signed during COP21 in 2015. It set important goals to keep global temperatures rising below 2C and aim for less than 1.5C. It also set financial targets for developed nations to help mitigate the impacts of climate change.

Rewilding

Returning ecosystems to their natural state without human intervention. It’s often achieved by reintroducing native species to an area, stopping wildlife culls and allowing forests to regenerate on their own instead of planting trees. “Nature knows best when it comes to survival and self-governance,” argues the charity Rewilding Europe. “We should step back and let nature manage itself.”

Scope one emissions

Scope one concerns the greenhouse gases emitted directly by an entity, such as those released as a result of a business’s industrial operations.

Scope two emissions

Scope two covers an entity’s indirect emissions, often associated with the production of gas and electricity it purchases from an energy supplier.

Scope three emissions

Scope three covers all emissions up and down the entity’s value chain. For many businesses, this is the source of most of their emissions. Upstream emissions include those arising from the production of materials purchased by the company, such as packaging; the distribution of finished goods; and business travel by employees. Downstream emissions include those generated by the use of its products and their end-of-life treatment, as well as those of any leased assets, franchises or investments.

Sink

Anything that absorbs more carbon dioxide than it emits, including the sea, soil and vegetation. In the future, it may be possible to create artificial sinks through the use of carbon capture and storage technology.

Tipping point

In climate science, this is the situation in which irreversible changes will happen and become self-perpetuating. Examples include the collapse of the east Antarctic ice sheet and the loss of tropical coral reefs.

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

This landmark international treaty was signed at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. It serves as the parent treaty to both the Kyoto protocol and the Paris agreement. The UNFCCC is also the name of the secretariat that supports the treaty’s operation. It is based in Bonn, Germany.

Warsaw international mechanism for loss and damage

Established at COP19 in 2013, this framework promotes dialogue and research to address the effects of climate change. It contains no provision for countries to pay climate reparations.

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