Putin has pledged carbon neutrality by 2060 He claims Russias forests will do much of the work
Dimitar Dilkoff AFP /Getty Images A forest fire outside the Siberian village of Byas-Kyuel last summer. Russiaâs coldest region, with a border on the Arctic Ocean, has experienced nearly overwhelming wildfires for three straight years.
MOSCOW â" Even as large swaths of the Siberian forest have burned during summer wildfires â" made increasingly worse by climate change â" the Kremlinâs strategy to slash emissions is a bet on those same trees.
President Vladimir Putin announced earlier this month that Russia âwill striveâ for carbon neutrality by 2060 â" its most ambitious climate goal.
But how Russia plans to accomplish that has been met with criticism and skepticism.
Putin claimed earlier this year that Russiaâs vast territory, especially its forests, could neutralize âseveral billion [metric] tonsâ of carbon dioxide emissions â" a figure climatologists say is unrealistic and undermines the viability of his carbon-neutrality pledge.
Putinâs increased emphasis on climate change will be tested at the United Nationsâ climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, which opens Sunday. World leaders, including President Biden, have insisted that the gathering must mark a key moment to collectively commit to keeping alive the most ambitious goal of the 2015 Paris climate agreement: limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) compared with preindustrial levels.
Some experts question whether Putinâs talk will translate into action in one of the worldâs largest oil and natural gas producers.
[Putin to stay home during COP26 climate summit in Glasgow ]
âThe statements Russia makes at [the U.N. climate conference] can often be considered as window dressing,â said Anna Korppoo, a research professor at Norwayâs Fridtjof Nansen Institute, specializing in Russiaâs climate policy.
âYou have to say that youâre doing something,â she added, âbut then thereâs the other question of whether that something is concrete.â
Itâs not enough, she noted, to make pledges by âsimply recalculatingâ how much carbon a forest absorbs.
Russia has long faced criticism for setting weak climate targets and not doing more to curb the carbon footprint of its massive fossil fuel industry. Experts at the Climate Action Tracker, which monitors countriesâ climate promises, rate Russiaâs 2030 target under the Paris climate agreement as âhighly insufficient.â
Putin has said he wonât attend the Glasgow climate conference in person, though heâs still expected to participate via video link.
Alexei Druzhinin
Sputnik/Kremlin Pool/AP
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks via video conference in St. Petersburg at a summit of the Eurasian Economic Union on Oct. 14.
Moscow has not signed on to the Global Methane Pledge, a U.S.- and Europe-led initiative that aims to reduce methane emissions nearly a third by 2030. Russia also raised objections to European Union proposals for a carbon border tax, which would impose a levy on imports of carbon-intensive steel, aluminum, cement, fertilizers and electricity. Putin has criticized it as an attempt to use âunfair means of competition.â
To reach carbon neutrality by 2060, Russia plans to reduce its oil and coal industries, while doubling down on natural gas. But its sprawling network of pipelines leak methane, the chief component of natural gas and the second-most abundant greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide.
[Russia allows methane leaks at planetâs peril]
âTogether, we need to find technological solutions to minimize methane leakages,â said Ruslan Edelgeriyev, Russiaâs special envoy on climate issues and the countryâs top climate negotiator. He added that he has had discussions with his U.S. counterpart, John F. Kerry, about joint satellite monitoring of emissions.
âOn the contrary, many countries want to switch over to gas and youâre telling us to stop it,â Edelgeriyev said. âI donât believe this is correct. Task number one is to step away from coal.â
Over 20 years, methaneâs warming impact is more than 80 times greater than that of carbon dioxide, and high leakage from pipelines and other sites can make it more harmful than coal. The Paris-based International Energy Agency, an intergovernmental organization set up in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis, puts the countryâs 2020 methane emissions figure at nearly 14 million tons, which would make Russia the worldâs largest emitter of oil- and gas-based methane.
To meet a Putin goal of reducing Russiaâs carbon emissions to below the E.U.âs level by 2050, Russiaâs Ministry of Economic Development outlined four strategies in a draft proposal seen by The Washington Post. Three of the scenarios hinge on Russiaâs ecosystems â" forests, tundra, swamps and more â" absorbing at least 1 billion tons of carbon dioxide in 30 years, double what they do now, according to most studies. Putin insists the number can be as high as 2.5 billions tons of carbon dioxide.
Andrey Rudakov
Bloomberg News
A gas-drilling rig on a resource base for the Power of Siberia gas pipeline in Russiaâs Sakha Republic.
Anna Romanovskaya, a scientist and director of the government-organized Institute of Global Climate and Ecology, defended the figure as realistic â" as long as thereâs a commitment to reducing wildfires and increasing reforestation.
She also suggested that Russia could implement more forest fire protection measures in lands currently considered âunmanaged,â so that they could eventually be counted as âmanagedâ and further boost the absorptive capacity.
[What you need to know about the U.N. COP26 climate summit â" and why it matters]
âThe potential is huge, but you need to know how to use it, and to do that you need to work and not swing your hands in different directions,â she said. âWe have really moved in the right direction this year.â
Thatâs been spurred by Putinâs own change of tune on climate change.
In 2003, he said, â2 to 3 degrees [of global warming] wouldnât hurt. Weâll spend less on fur coats.â In 2018, Putin rejected the scientific consensus that climate change is human-caused and said it was the result of âchanges of global character, cosmic changes, some invisible moves in the galaxyâ â" a theory ruled out by climatologists.
But he acknowledged climate changeâs human origins for a first time in June during nationally televised remarks, adding that the thawing permafrost in Russiaâs northern regions could lead to âvery serious social and economic consequencesâ for the country. Parts of Russiaâs Arctic already have warmed double or even triple the global average.
âI can say that certainly this year in general the climate agenda has shifted from a point of some endless loop,â Romanovskaya said. âRussia was going around in circles, discussing whether there is warming or no warming, is it anthropogenic or not, do all our forests absorb it or not.â
Alexey Kokorin, director of the Climate and Energy Program at WWF Russia, called Putinâs 2060 carbon-neutral goal a âpolitical declaration.â
âBut itâs a good thing that this task is even on the agenda,â he said. âWe can question some other aspects of this strategy, but so far this is a level of political declarations and concepts that is already a big step forward for Russia.â
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