The Malta Independent 29 April 2024, Monday
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Malta's future may be tied to achieving a zero carbon economy

Monday, 15 May 2017, 08:30 Last update: about 8 years ago

Carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in the air are the highest they have been for 650,000 years, according to European Space Agency statistics. CO2 is a heat-trapping greenhouse gas, and levels in the air must be reduced. In fact, the EU’s Climate and Energy 2020 package is binding legislation to ensure that all EU member states, including Malta, meet its three climate and energy key targets for the year 2020: a 20 per cent cut in greenhouse gas emissions (from 1990 levels), 20 per cent of energy from renewables and a 20 per cent improvement in energy efficiency.

Attaining the 2020 targets is not enough. The EU is taking action in several areas to meet the targets required if capping global warming at 2C is to be achieved. This is the highest temperature scientists estimate the earth can stand before global warming has a catastrophic effect on food production and water reserves and Malta, along with the rest of the Mediterranean, is not exempt from the catastrophic effects such a change could bring.  

While pressure is being put on both the public and private sectors to change the way they operate to reduce their carbon emissions in a bid to mitigate the impact of climate change, Climate-KIC and Paragon Europe are looking at how to achieve a zero carbon economy beyond 2030 to mitigate the severely damaging effects of climate change. Government legislation, the growing green economy and innovations in low carbon technology are helping to drive change and move Malta and its Mediterranean neighbours towards a low carbon economy.

Two hundred concerned delegates from all over the world will converge in Malta on 29 May for what promises to be Europe’s most important Climate Conference this year, Towards a Zero Carbon Economy by 2030' at the Old University in Valletta. High-level speakers from the public and private sectors will be presenting their views on how business can move to low carbon operations, how government and EU legislation is helping to tackle the issue and how financial and technological incentives can assist organisations to reduce their carbon footprint.

The EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) is the EU’s key tool for cutting greenhouse gas emissions from large-scale facilities in the power and industry sectors, as well as the aviation sector. The ETS covers around 45 per cent of the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, national emission reduction targets set by the EU cover the sectors not in the ETS, accounting for some 55 per cent of total EU emissions from housing, agriculture and waste and transport. EU member countries have also taken on binding national targets for raising the share of renewables in their energy consumption by 2020, under the Renewable Energy Directive. These targets also vary, to reflect countries’ different starting points for production of renewables and the ability to further increase it, from 10 per cent in Malta to 49 per cent in Sweden.

Achieving the goals of the 2020 package should help increase the EU’s energy security and reduce dependence on imported energy, contributing to achieving a European Energy Union that creates jobs, advances green growth and makes Europe more competitive. Climate-KIC and Paragon Europe are highlighting the climate challenges in the cradle of civilisation to create the world’s first zero carbon economy solution in the Mediterranean by 2030 and issue an important Valletta Declaration from the conference that will bind the generations to come.

By organising a conference around three important pillars, the challenges and solutions in green urban centres, circular economy and green finance, the conference will also showcase the key deliverables achieved so far on Smart Sustainable Districts in the Mediterranean. Throughout the conference, the focus will be on low carbon mobility concepts, the operation of smart grids, energy neutral buildings, the promotion of efficient water management and the improvement of public and green spaces.

The conference will be opened by Sustainable Development, the Environment and Climate Change Minister José Herrera and includes a raft of global experts including Climate-KIC CEO Kirsten Dunlop, ENEA Head of Sustainable Materials Division Dario della Sala, Linde Gas Italy CEO Giovanni Pavesi, WssTP Coordinator of Water and Agrifood Jochen Froebrich and Piraeus University of Applied Sciences Engineering Department professors C.S Psomopoulos and G.C. Ioannides.

Paragon Group chairman Edwin Ward said: “With Minister José Herrera we agreed to work over the long-term in three areas: mobility, circular economy and financial instruments, to tackle these two: we trust this will frame how Malta should start preparing now for the future impact of climate change. A long-term adaptation and mitigation plan to cope with the effects must start now. This includes identifying the areas that will be prone to sea flooding and building appropriate flood defences; drawing up a comprehensive water framework plan to ensure the survival of the mean sea level aquifer and developing comprehensive mitigation and adaptability plans to protect our cultural heritage. We are proud to lead this from the front as the national contact point for Climate-KIC.”

The conference will culminate in a Valletta Declaration on a Mediterranean Zero Carbon Economy.

For details of the programme, and to register, visit: http://paragonevents.eu/event.php?c=climate-change or email:[email protected]

 

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