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Natural Gas Seen as Antidote to Warming

Jeffrey Sachs (second from the right) and Rachel Kyte (third from the right) at the Gaidar Forum. Igor Tabakov

As a major exporter of fossil fuels, Russia may seem an unlikely candidate for global environmental champion, but macro-economic experts believe the country can play a vital role in reducing carbon emissions and the impact of climate change.

This uncommon view of the country's potential to support ecological improvement was voiced during a panel discussion at the Gaidar Forum taking place in Moscow this week, which is organized and hosted by the Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration.

It is precisely thanks to its importance in the natural resources sector that Russia can shift energy use in the right direction, said Jeffrey Sachs, economist and director at Columbia University's Earth Institute.

"If Russia can sell natural gas plentifully, if it can sell nuclear power plentifully, and if it will keep its coal under the ground and encourage the U.S. and China to keep their coal under the ground, we actually have a path to climate stabilization," Sachs said.

Coal is the worst  fossil fuel in terms of environmental impact, while natural gas offers a cleaner alternative, releasing less carbon than either coal or oil. This will be vital in the transition to a sustainable energy economy over the next 40 years, he added.

Sachs particularly urged Russia to expand its exports of natural gas to China, by far the world's largest consumer of coal but increasingly a destination of Russian oil and gas exports.

Russia is already a leader in certain areas of climate protection, including forest fire response and successful reduction of gas flaring in some regions of the country, said Rachel Kyte, formerly vice president for sustainable development at the World Bank.

But there are other areas where Russia must lead — specifically, in fighting to protect the circumpolar permafrost, about 70 percent of which is located in Russia, she said.

The release of even a small part of the methane contained in the permafrost threatens to undo any progress made in the struggle against climate change, Kyte said.

The melting of the permafrost poses a significant danger to the population living in the area.

Collapsing ground has already damaged buildings and infrastructure in the city of Yakutsk, and the Emergency Situations Ministry estimated in 2010 that a quarter of housing in the Far North could be wiped out by 2030, Kyte said.

Russia has already seen substantial temperature increases — from 2 to 3 degrees Celsius over the last 150 years, according to the Russian national hydrometerological service.

Over that same period, the increase in temperate worldwide averaged between 0.7 and 0.8 degrees Celsius.

While climbing temperatures could seem a boon to Russians weary of long, cold winters, "the adverse effects include: windstorms, heat waves, floods, forest fires, and melting of the permafrost," Kyte said.

Contact the author at d.damora@imedia.ru

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