German Advisory Council on Global Change (WBGU) publishes Special Climate Report
Press Release of 1 September 2009 
 The German Advisory Council on Global Change (Wissenschaftliche Beirat der Bundesregierung Globale Umweltveränderungen  - WBGU) has developed an innovative approach to solving the problem of  climate change. A key component is an agreement between the community of  states regarding a cap for the total amount of carbon dioxide that may  be emitted up to the year 2050 in form of a global budget. According to  the scientists, among them Dirk Messner,  Director of the German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für  Entwicklungspolitik (DIE), this "budget approach" can lead to success at  the UN climate negotiations due to be held in Copenhagen in December.  “Without a success at the world climate conference in Copenhagen there  will be no successful struggle against poverty. The German Advisory  Council on Global Change has developed an international climate  protection formula which can help the Copenhagen negotiations to  succeed”, states Prof. Messner today at the handing over of the Special  Report "Solving the climate dilemma: the budget approach" to the German  Federal Government. “For industrial as well as developing countries  alike the energy and greenhouse gas efficiency approach will be  worthwhile. The fossil fuel era has to come to an end within a few  decades. Without a close co-operation of industrialised and developing  countries this change of paradigm will not take place, states the  WBGU-Vice Chairman Prof. Messner. 
 L'Aquila was an important intermediate step
 The primary aim of the budget approach proposed by  the WBGU is to limit global warming to a mean temperature of 2°C. "The  new approach is straightforward, transparent, fair and designed to serve  as a framework of reference for climate policymakers. It could ease  negotiations at the climate summit," said WBGU Chairman Prof. Dr. Hans  Joachim Schellnhuber. The significance of this so-called "2°C guardrail"  was acknowledged by the 16 major economies in L'Aquila in July 2009. In  the view of the WBGU, after this essential interim step it is now vital  to make this temperature limit a binding agreement under international  law. The dedicated and target-oriented action of leading heads of state  and governments is now called for. 
 The concept
 The latest scientific findings show that if a  dangerous climate change is to be avoided, only a limited amount of  carbon dioxide may be emitted into the Earth's atmosphere between now  and the year 2050. For this reason the WBGU proposes the introduction of  a global cap for carbon dioxide emitted from fossil-fuel sources, i.e. a  "global budget." As each individual person should have the same  emission rights, this global budget is to be distributed among the  various states according to their sizes of population. This results in  national emission budgets from which reduction commitments for each  separate country can be derived. Under this method developed by the  WBGU, only a small number of political parameters for determining the  national budgets would then have to be negotiated. 
 Based on its national carbon dioxide budget  allowance, each country would then be required to develop sustainable  and verifiable strategies for a low carbon economy. Due to the higher  amount of emissions caused in the past, the industrialised countries  would be required to assist the developing and newly industrializing  countries in their endeavours by means of financial and technological  transfers. 
 A "business-as-usual" mentality will lead to climate crisis
 This "stocktake" prior to the climate conference in  Copenhagen also illustrates that very ambitious reduction goals will  have to be agreed upon involving the fundamental decoupling of economic  growth from CO2 emission levels as soon as possible. "The world economy is on the way towards CO2  insolvency. For approximately two thirds of all countries a  'business-as-usual' policy is no longer an option. In order to avoid  dangerous climatic changes it is absolutely essential to set all  countries a course for transformation to a low-carbon economy  immediately. This also includes the newly industrialising and developing  countries. The whole world must pull together in a concerted effort to  overcome the climate crisis," said Prof. Messner. 
 Global carbon dioxide emissions need to sink drastically by 2050
 Between now and the year 2050 not more than 750  billion tons of carbon dioxide from the combustion of fossil fuels may  be emitted if dangerous climate change is to be avoided. At the present  time approximately 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide are being emitted  worldwide per year. If emissions continue at today's levels, the global  budget will be exhausted in around 25 years. Emission levels are still  increasing from year to year. The WBGU urgently recommends reducing  levels worldwide by 2020 at the very latest. "Thus a race against time  has already begun," continued Schellnhuber. Any further delay would make  such drastic measures necessary that dangerous climate change would be  almost impossible to avoid. Once climate change has occurred it will not  be possible to reverse it for hundreds of years. 
 Slicing through the Gordian Knot of climate policy
 Climate change is progressing more rapidly than  previously expected and thus increases pressure on the policymakers to  take action. The sluggish progress in climate negotiations seen till now  is not sufficient to meet this challenge. The negotiation of a new  climate protection treaty is likely to be far more complex and therefore  more difficult than in the past. This is partly due to the growing  number of countries that will have to agree to concrete reduction  commitments in order to avoid dangerous climate impacts. "The Gordian  Knot of climate policy can be sliced through if the negotiations are  geared towards the WBGU budget approach," said Schellnhuber. 
 Creating a framework for a low-carbon world economy
 The WBGU shows that climate policy inevitably leads  to restructuring to form a low-carbon world economy and describes the  conditions and incentives that need to be created in order to achieve  this objective. In addition to determining the CO2  budgets still permissible for each country, it is also necessary to  expand global emission trading, promote technology partnerships and  foster cooperation between so-called high- and low-emission countries. A  world climate bank needs to be established in order to monitor these  mechanisms and the decarbonisation roadmaps of each of the countries. 
 The "2°C guardrail" for avoiding dangerous climatic changes
 Already in 1995 the WBGU proposed the introduction of  an upper limit for a tolerable rise in global mean temperature, the  so-called "2°C guard rail," and, working on this basis, calculated the  necessary emission reductions. The WBGU budget approach develops this  method further and makes it adaptable to international climate policies.  
 Please direct your queries to the Secretariat of the  German Advisory Council on Global Change (WBGU), Phone: +49 30 263948  12, E-Mail: wbgu@wbgu.de.