Russia changes its tune on climate change Whats behind the shift
Russia is a place where industrial-scale fossil fuel energy is traditionally so plentiful that city dwellers in centrally heated apartments still sometimes throw their windows open in midwinter to cool off.
So the Kremlinâs pledges at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, including a strategy to make Russia carbon neutral by 2060, are unprecedented. Even some of the Kremlinâs toughest critics now agree that Russian authorities have finally accepted the need for serious action to meet the climate challenge.
Why We Wrote ThisRussia showed signs at COP26 that it is finally getting serious about the threat of climate change. But the Kremlinâs shift in thought may need to go further to prepare the country for the future.
But critics point out that, while the progress is real, there is a lot less to Russiaâs new pledges than meets the eye. Even if all current goals are met, renewable energy will only be around 6% of Russiaâs total by 2035, while European targets call for it to be at least 20% by that time. And Russiaâs promise of carbon neutrality by 2060 relies on the carbon-absorbing capacities of Russian forests and not on reforming the countryâs power grid.
âThe Russian government is sincere, but they still do not plan to meet climate neutrality targets by changing the energy balance,â says researcher Tatiana Lanshina. âA lot of things are going to have to change, because the world is changing whether we like it or not.â
Moscow
Solar panels have begun to sprout among Russiaâs many dachas, the often remote and humble cottages where millions spend their summers. Thanks to new laws, significant state support for renewable energy, and a higher level of public climate consciousness, the alternative-energy industry is finally poised to take off among notoriously hydrocarbon-addicted Russians.
This may not sound remarkable to those in the West, where small-scale renewable energy has been a going concern for decades.
But Russia is a place where industrial-scale fossil fuel energy is traditionally so plentiful and cheap that city dwellers in centrally heated apartments still sometimes throw their windows open in midwinter just to cool off. The country only got around to ratifying the Paris climate accords two years ago, and President Vladimir Putin once remarked that a bit of warming would be good for the wheat crop.
Why We Wrote ThisRussia showed signs at COP26 that it is finally getting serious about the threat of climate change. But the Kremlinâs shift in thought may need to go further to prepare the country for the future.
The embrace of solar power among dacha owners is just part of a broader shift in thinking about climate change and alternative energy across Russian society. Even some of the Kremlinâs toughest critics now agree that Russian authorities have finally accepted the need for serious action to meet the climate challenge. Though Mr. Putin was criticized for not attending the Glasgow COP26 climate summit in person, the Russian delegation did make some solid, unprecedented pledges, including a legally enacted strategy to make Russia carbon neutral by 2060, and joining the international agreement to end deforestation by 2030.
But while the Kremlin is getting active on climate change, environmentalists say authorities are not doing enough to prepare Russia for the world that is coming. Though the government is taking positive steps, they say, it is not addressing the changes that Russiaâs power grid and carbon-dependent economy will require in order to keep up with more proactively green parts of the world like Europe.
A green Russia?After decades of foot-dragging, Russian governments on all levels have visibly begun to support green efforts and make resources available, especially for renewable energy projects.
A 1 trillion ruble (about $15 billion) federal program is already providing funding and other support for renewable energy startups. The eight-year pilot project, extended this year until 2035, has seen construction of 63 solar energy farms, 15 wind power plants, and 3 small hydro stations, says Alexei Zhikharev, director of the Russia Renewable Energy Development Association (RREDA). He says the pace will pick up now. âElectricity from renewable energy generation is already cheaper than that from traditional generation facilities, and the costs are rapidly falling,â he says.
Moscow now has Europeâs largest fleet of electric buses, almost 1,000 of them, which the cityâs deputy mayor Maxim Liksutov says will reduce the cityâs carbon emissions by 86 thousand tons next year. âWe expect all the routes will be operated by ecofriendly buses by 2030,â he says. Russiaâs second city of St. Petersburg is building electric river boats to replace its diesel-powered fleet.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
One of Moscow's new fleet of electric buses, the largest such fleet in Europe, travels along a road in Moscow, Feb. 19, 2021. The words on the bus read: "It's an electric bus."
The Pacific island of Sakhalin, near Japan, has become a prime laboratory for the Kremlinâs newfound enthusiasm. The heavily forested region aims to become carbon-neutral by 2025 in a trial project that will involve âgasification, alternative energy, clean transport, energy efficiency, and sustainable forest management programs,â according to its governor, Valery Limarenko. He said that the regionâs main industry, oil and gas extraction, is ready to make all the needed changes to meet that target.
Dacha dwellers are starting to come on board too. Sergei Zigunov, deputy director of EcoNRJ, a company that sells and installs Chinese-made solar panels, says that energy independence is the basic appeal for them. Plus, thanks to a new law, people can now hook their home system up to the electricity grid, and sell any surplus back to the company. Even in sun-starved Russia, he says, solar panels â" installation of which costs upwards of $1,000 â" can pay for themselves within five years.
âWeâre a small company, but we install around 400 systems a year nowadays,â he says. âItâs not much, but interest is growing fast, and people are warming up to the idea of energy alternatives.â
Generally, environmentalists and government seem to now be pushing in the same direction, after many years of tension.
âWe get a lot of cooperation from local authorities, who now seem eager to provide support and funding for environmental clean-up efforts, recycling, and just about anything that looks green,â says Alexandra Usacheva, head of the Clean North, a volunteer group that promotes environmental goals in the European-Arctic region of Arkhangelsk. âMost of all, they are inviting us into the schools, to teach ecological values to young people. Current public opinion may be slow to catch on, but the next generation is going to be amazing on environmental issues.â
Not everyone in Russiaâs scientific establishment agrees with the new line. Arkhangelsk-based Alexander Kirilov, director of Russiaâs largest Arctic national park, says that ice sheets may be receding, and the climate warming, but itâs nothing to worry about.
âIn my opinion, there is no catastrophe happening,â he says âEven if global warming is taking place, itâs not as awful for humans and wildlife as some people say. We monitor the [Arctic] wildlife, and we have concluded that the number of animals is growing and their stress levels are not increasing. ... Climate change has been occurring for decades, but itâs caused by natural cycles. Human activity has accelerated changes that were already happening.â
âThe world is changing whether we like it or notâCritics point out that, while the progress is real, there is a lot less to Russiaâs new pledges than meets the eye. Russia, the worldâs fourth-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, is starting far behind the rest of the world.
While energy produced from renewable sources was about 10% of the global total last year, in Russia it was less than half a percent. Even if all current goals are met, renewable energy will only be around 6% of Russiaâs total by 2035, while European targets call for it to be at least 20% by that time, according to Mr. Zhikharev of the RREDA.
âWe have some good beginnings, and a lot of potential, but itâs not enough,â he says. âOne major need is to develop green financing tools, and make them widely available to investors.â
Mr. Putinâs promise of carbon neutrality by 2060 relies heavily on the carbon-absorbing capacities of Russian forests â" the worldâs largest, which occupy about 20% of its territory â" and not on making major changes to the countryâs power grid, which currently relies on gas (46%), coal (18%), hydro (18%), and nuclear sources (17%) for electricity generation.
âThe Russian government is sincere, but they still do not plan to meet climate neutrality targets by changing the energy balance,â says Tatiana Lanshina, a senior researcher at RANEPA, the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. âThey think they can do this by emphasizing our forests, hydro, and nuclear. But a lot of things are going to have to change, because the world is changing whether we like it or not.â
Experts say that climate-driven disasters such as floods, wildfires, and melting permafrost have played a role in focusing Kremlin minds on the problem of man-made climate change. But an even more forceful factor is the worldwide campaign to abandon fossil fuels, which represent at least a quarter of Russiaâs GDP and 60% of its exports. The European Unionâs plan to impose a carbon tax will cost Russian businesses heavily. Indeed, as the world moves toward net zero carbon in coming decades, much of Russiaâs industrial and energy infrastructure risks obsolescence.
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âThings are starting to move in Russia, but not thanks to Putin. Itâs because if all the actions world leaders are pledging happen, there will be no consumers for Russian fuel, and Russia will be economically isolated in the world,â says Vladimir Slivyak, a veteran Russian environmental activist.
âNow all kinds of projects â" be it solar, hydrogen, wind, small hydro, carbon capture â" are in vogue and getting support from authorities. Thatâs good. But Russia could be doing much more. And it will be doing more in the future, of that I am confident. Not because Putin decided, but because the world is on the move and Russia canât afford to be left behind.â
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