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ID085412
Title ProperLinking as leverage
Other Title Informationemissions trading and the politics of climate change
LanguageENG
AuthorBenwell, Richard
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Seven years after the United States rejected binding emissions limitations and George Bush declared the Kyoto Protocol dead, there are signs of change. There is growing interest in emissions trading at the regional, national and substate level, and in the prospect of linking schemes together. This article suggests that the rapid growth of emissions trading markets themselves may be helping to swing the cost-benefit analysis of participation in emissions reduction commitments for American actors and others. Most simply, the practical viability of international emissions trading has now been confirmed, largely by the European market, but there are two further elements to this development for which this article presents the early evidence. Firstly, unanticipated benefits appear to be accruing in the established compliance markets. Secondly, ownership of the emerging markets can bring new bargaining power to encourage others to adopt meaningful climate targets.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 21, No. 4; Dec 2008: p545 - 562
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 21, No. 4; Dec 2008: p545 - 562
Key WordsClimate Change ;  United States ;  Leverage ;  Emission Trading ;  George Bush


 
 
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