Berliner Boersenzeitung - In Peru, a small carbon footprint is not a choice

EUR -
AED 4.211535
AFN 71.676752
ALL 95.733091
AMD 433.823977
ANG 2.053148
AOA 1051.593401
ARS 1600.374619
AUD 1.627412
AWG 2.06563
AZN 1.950295
BAM 1.947379
BBD 2.317448
BDT 141.189442
BGN 1.955936
BHD 0.432929
BIF 3415.654921
BMD 1.146776
BND 1.466819
BOB 7.950618
BRL 6.002451
BSD 1.150589
BTN 105.991651
BWP 15.510453
BYN 3.392216
BYR 22476.807566
BZD 2.314162
CAD 1.56754
CDF 2497.677846
CHF 0.902966
CLF 0.026473
CLP 1045.297774
CNY 7.877226
CNH 7.904876
COP 4245.788675
CRC 542.340521
CUC 1.146776
CUP 30.389561
CVE 109.790224
CZK 24.446682
DJF 204.901247
DKK 7.472524
DOP 70.284225
DZD 151.871011
EGP 60.137153
ERN 17.201638
ETB 179.600058
FJD 2.54229
FKP 0.858972
GBP 0.865016
GEL 3.113466
GGP 0.858972
GHS 12.467087
GIP 0.858972
GMD 83.714446
GNF 10087.115518
GTQ 8.822847
GYD 240.728994
HKD 8.976188
HNL 30.457361
HRK 7.531678
HTG 150.713002
HUF 391.770184
IDR 19417.209475
ILS 3.590716
IMP 0.858972
INR 105.92488
IQD 1507.381498
IRR 1515779.710561
ISK 144.195796
JEP 0.858972
JMD 180.085743
JOD 0.813055
JPY 182.742753
KES 148.106628
KGS 100.285209
KHR 4617.929609
KMF 490.819871
KPW 1031.959506
KRW 1712.801471
KWD 0.352198
KYD 0.958854
KZT 563.224399
LAK 24650.509115
LBP 103040.1651
LKR 357.734577
LRD 210.569416
LSL 19.008383
LTL 3.386131
LVL 0.693673
LYD 7.344145
MAD 10.78297
MDL 19.980509
MGA 4769.230439
MKD 61.639079
MMK 2407.305418
MNT 4094.276022
MOP 9.274961
MRU 45.726067
MUR 52.763545
MVR 17.729364
MWK 1995.211039
MXN 20.460747
MYR 4.516584
MZN 73.275835
NAD 19.008301
NGN 1595.004784
NIO 42.345773
NOK 11.171322
NPR 169.581488
NZD 1.967822
OMR 0.440939
PAB 1.150624
PEN 3.937473
PGK 4.962475
PHP 68.32663
PKR 321.424127
PLN 4.270657
PYG 7449.68722
QAR 4.195059
RON 5.093291
RSD 117.371371
RUB 92.492751
RWF 1682.174285
SAR 4.302891
SBD 9.23345
SCR 15.967057
SDG 689.21271
SEK 10.757354
SGD 1.467534
SHP 0.860379
SLE 28.20642
SLL 24047.317495
SOS 656.441259
SRD 42.850997
STD 23735.945721
STN 24.394191
SVC 10.06846
SYP 128.021919
SZL 19.013199
THB 36.949339
TJS 11.029006
TMT 4.025183
TND 3.382871
TOP 2.761161
TRY 50.675682
TTD 7.808234
TWD 36.716099
TZS 2992.90847
UAH 50.946931
UGX 4307.373247
USD 1.146776
UYU 46.01103
UZS 13963.615909
VES 505.056676
VND 30153.325415
VUV 136.420806
WST 3.1976
XAF 653.112754
XAG 0.013638
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.09922
XCG 2.073732
XDR 0.812263
XOF 653.124095
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.563802
ZAR 19.260525
ZMK 10322.358766
ZMW 22.351053
ZWL 369.261371
  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.8

    -0.16%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.05

    -0.22%

  • NGG

    0.2800

    91.09

    +0.31%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    23.1

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    -0.4400

    53.84

    -0.82%

  • RIO

    -1.9700

    88.73

    -2.22%

  • BCE

    -0.0650

    25.615

    -0.25%

  • BCC

    -0.0800

    69.54

    -0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    16.55

    -2.42%

  • RELX

    -0.2000

    33.98

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    0.0200

    59.91

    +0.03%

  • BP

    0.1750

    42.335

    +0.41%

  • VOD

    0.0960

    14.406

    +0.67%

  • AZN

    -2.5800

    189.92

    -1.36%

In Peru, a small carbon footprint is not a choice
In Peru, a small carbon footprint is not a choice / Photo: Ernesto BENAVIDES - AFP

In Peru, a small carbon footprint is not a choice

Sofia Llocclla Pellaca always descends on foot from the unlit hill where she lives with hardly any electricity on the outskirts of Lima. She rarely eats meat and cooks on a gas or wood stove.

Text size:

She has never even heard of a carbon footprint.

While some climate-conscious people in rich countries try to restrict their carbon emissions, Pellaca's minimal impact on the environment is an unhappy side-effect of poverty.

Giving the poor a better life and spurring economic growth while also curbing planet-harming emissions is one of the major challenges facing world leaders meeting for COP28 climate talks next month in the United Arab Emirates.

"I walk down, I walk where I need to be, I walk back" up the hill, said Pellaca, 31, a single mother of two who barely uses public transport, owns no car or motorbike, and has never traveled by plane.

Pellaca is a domestic worker who earns less than half Peru's minimum wage of $265 per month.

She lives in a shantytown in the fog-covered desert highlands of the Peruvian capital that are home to many of Lima's 2.7 million poor people.

Peru's economy mainly leans on fishing and mining, with 73 percent of the working population in the informal sector.

It has one of the lowest carbon footprints in South America, emitting an average of 1.7 tons of carbon per person, compared to 4.2 tons in Argentina.

In the United States, the average annual footprint per person is 15 tons, more than three times the global average.

Experts say that to stay below the critical benchmark two-degree Celsius (3.6-degree Fahrenheit) rise in global temperature, individuals need to reduce their carbon footprint to less than two tons in the coming decades.

Eating less meat, taking fewer flights, driving less and using electricity more frugally are all billed as ways to reduce the emission of planet-warming greenhouse gases.

- 'Confusing and misleading' -

In Pellaca's prefabricated home, there is no bathroom or heating. She has a television and a half-empty fridge. She and her mother, who lives a few houses away, get infrequent electricity from a pirate connection.

There is no public lighting or sewage system, and drinking water arrives every 15 days in tanker trucks.

Some 27.5 percent of Peru's population of 30 million lives in poverty.

Eradicating poverty and boosting access to services without increasing CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels is a major challenge facing developing countries.

In Peru, almost two-thirds of carbon emissions are a result of deforestation in the Amazon jungle and urbanization, said Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, former environment minister and president of the COP 20 in Lima in 2014.

He told AFP most of Peru's energy comes from hydro-electric sources.

It is "confusing and misleading" to assume that because it is a developing country, Peru can shirk its responsibilities in the face of the climate crisis, said the former minister.

Much of Latin America, he said, has failed to come up with "clear and well-planned strategies" to migrate towards renewable energy because it is "caught in the trap of oil, coal and gas."

Rich or poor, "the world will gradually leave fossil fuels behind. That is inevitable," said Pulgar-Vidal.

On the outskirts of Lima, residents need improved landfills, basic services and construction that is in harmony with "the surrounding ecosystem," he said, and transport shortages must be addressed with electric vehicles.

Pellaca, meanwhile, dreams of buying a motorbike on which to take her 14-year-old daughter to school.

"It would be good" to buy a solar panel for more regular electricity, but a small one costs $115.

"In the future I will buy one, little by little," she said.

(K.Müller--BBZ)