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Modern View
INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE NEGOTIATIONS
(4)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
137266
Changing role of international negotiations in EU climate policy
/ Fischer, Severin; Geden, Oliver
Fischer, Severin
Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
For many years, the EU pursued the strategy of ‘leading by example’ in international climate negotiations. Climate policy has generally been seen as one of the few policy fields in which the EU is able to develop coherent positions and speak with a single voice. Since the Copenhagen climate summit, however, frictions inside the EU and a paradigm shift have become increasingly evident. With the October 2014 compromise in the European Council on a new framework for 2030, the international climate negotiations have become less important and a more incremental domestic approach has prevailed.
Key Words
European Union
;
International Climate Negotiations
;
EU Climate Policy
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2
ID:
116041
India's foreign policy on climate change: neither the porcupine nor the tiger
/ Gaan, Narottam
Gaan, Narottam
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2012.
Key Words
World Politics
;
GATT
;
CTBT
;
China
;
India
;
Climate Change
;
Un Security Council
;
Kashmir Issue
;
Indian Foreign Policy
;
UNFCCC
;
Liberal Market Economy
;
International Climate Negotiations
;
Foreign Policy
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3
ID:
096134
Keeping warming within the 2 °C limit after Copenhagen
/ Macintosh, Andrew
Macintosh, Andrew
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2010.
Summary/Abstract
The object of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December 2009 was to reach an agreement on a new international legal architecture for addressing anthropogenic climate change post-2012. It failed in this endeavour, producing a political agreement in the form of the Copenhagen Accord. The Accord sets an ambitious goal of holding the increase in the global average surface temperature to below 2 °C. This paper describes 45 CO2-only mitigation scenarios that provide an indication of what would need to be done to stay within the 2 °C limit if the international climate negotiations stay on their current path. The results suggest that if developed countries adopt a combined target for 2020 of =20% below 1990 levels, global CO2 emissions would probably have to be reduced by =5%/yr, and possibly =10%/yr, post-2030 (after a decade transitional period) in order to keep warming to 2 °C. If aggressive abatement commitments for 2020 are not forthcoming from all the major emitting countries, the likelihood of warming being kept within the 2 °C limit is diminutive.
Key Words
Climate Change
;
Mitigation
;
International Climate Negotiations
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4
ID:
100454
Turbulence in the climate regime
/ Peake, Stephen
Peake, Stephen
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2010.
Summary/Abstract
The ongoing shift in the distribution of global financial power could come just in time to revitalize the IMF and other major international financial institutions.
Key Words
Economic Development
;
Australia
;
Social Development
;
United States
;
Climate Change
;
Kyoto Protocol
;
UNFCCC
;
Global Climate Change
;
Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change
;
International Climate Negotiations
;
Copenhagen Summit - 2009
;
IPCC
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