What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime
Title | What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime
Title | What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime PDF eBook |
Author | John Whalley |
Publisher | |
Pages | 32 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Commercial policy |
ISBN |
Abstract: This paper discusses the role that trade can potentially play in both negotiating and operating a post Kyoto/post 2012 global climate policy regime. As an addition to the bargaining set for a global climate negotiation, trade in principle widens the range of jointly beneficial potential outcomes and can in this sense be a potential facilitator of an agreed global climate regime. The reverse is also true, that in a linked climate-trade-finance global policy coordination structure that goes well beyond what was envisioned at Bretton Woods, climate now added to the global policy bargaining set also offers the prospect of potentially stronger trade disciplines (and even beyond WTO disciplines being negotiated). Trade policy can as well be an instrument for the implementation of a global climate regime, since trade provides a mechanism for achieving an internalization outcome for the global externality that climate change represents, and that provides a potentially more efficient outcome and also helps meet distributional objectives. In short, trade added to the emerging post 2012 climate regime can both expand the bargaining set for both (effectively linked) negotiations, and additionally provide an instrument for the implementation of an agreed outcome.
What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime
Title | What Role for Trade in a Post 2012 Global Climate Policy Regime PDF eBook |
Author | John Whalley (Professor, University of Western Ontario, Canada.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Commercial policy |
ISBN |
This paper discusses the role that trade can potentially play in both negotiating and operating a post Kyoto/post 2012 global climate policy regime. As an addition to the bargaining set for a global climate negotiation, trade in principle widens the range of jointly beneficial potential outcomes and can in this sense be a potential facilitator of an agreed global climate regime. The reverse is also true, that in a linked climate-trade-finance global policy coordination structure that goes well beyond what was envisioned at Bretton Woods, climate now added to the global policy bargaining set also offers the prospect of potentially stronger trade disciplines (and even beyond WTO disciplines being negotiated). Trade policy can as well be an instrument for the implementation of a global climate regime, since trade provides a mechanism for achieving an internalization outcome for the global externality that climate change represents, and that provides a potentially more efficient outcome and also helps meet distributional objectives. In short, trade added to the emerging post 2012 climate regime can both expand the bargaining set for both (effectively linked) negotiations, and additionally provide an instrument for the implementation of an agreed outcome -- National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Climate and Trade Policies in a Post-2012 World
Title | Climate and Trade Policies in a Post-2012 World PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | UN |
Pages | 124 |
Release | 2009 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN |
Climate change represents more than just an environmental challenge--it is also a challenge to future economic development. Overlaps between climate change and trade policies are inevitable and are already evident. This publication provides a timely collection of short forward-thinking articles by leading experts on the relationship between trade and climate change policies. They closely examine the interplay between climate and trade policies and institutions and offer recommendations for promoting a mutually supportive relationship.
Climate Change and International Trade
Title | Climate Change and International Trade PDF eBook |
Author | Rafael Leal-Arcas |
Publisher | Edward Elgar Publishing |
Pages | 531 |
Release | 2013-01-01 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 178195609X |
Rafael Leal-Arcas expertly examines the interface of climate change mitigation and international trade law with a view to addressing the question: How can we make best use of the international trading system experience to aim at a global climate change agreement? The insightful book contributes to developing the architecture for a post- 2012 global climate agreement and, in doing so, seeks and proposes new approaches to climate change mitigation by linking it to the international trade system. The author suggests the adoption of a bottom-up approach to climate change negotiations by using the evolution of multilateral trade agreements as a model for reaching a global climate treaty. He discusses the innovative approach of inserting climate goals within regional trade agreements, given their proliferation – especially bilateral – in the international trading system. He explains the trade implications of climate change mitigation policies by analyzing a couple of areas where the international regimes for trade and climate change mitigation may potentially clash. Climate Change and International Trade will strongly appeal to undergraduate and graduate students of international and European trade law, international and European environmental law as well as social science academics. NGOs, think tanks, practitioners, researchers, and international organizations will also find plenty of valuable information in this timely resource.
Post-Kyoto International Climate Policy
Title | Post-Kyoto International Climate Policy PDF eBook |
Author | Joseph E. Aldy |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 211 |
Release | 2009-08-06 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 0521138000 |
A volume summarizing the key lessons from one of the world's most important projects on climate change.
Post-Kyoto Climate Governance
Title | Post-Kyoto Climate Governance PDF eBook |
Author | Asim Zia |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 221 |
Release | 2013-02-11 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 1135078270 |
In the midst of human-induced global climate change, powerful industrialized nations and rapidly industrializing nations are still heavily dependent on fossil fuels. Even if we arrive at a Hubbert’s peak for oil extraction in the 21st century, the availability of technologically recoverable coal and natural gas will mean that fossil fuels continue to be burned for many years to come, and our civilization will have to deal with the consequences far into the future. Climate change will not discriminate between rich and poor nations, and yet the UN-driven process of negotiating a global climate governance regime has hit serious roadblocks. This book takes a trans-disciplinary perspective to identify the causes of failure in developing an international climate policy regime and lays out a roadmap for developing a post-Kyoto (post-2012) climate governance regime in the light of lessons learned from the Kyoto phase. Three critical policy analytical lenses are used to evaluate the inherent complexity of designing post-Kyoto climate policy: the politics of scale; the politics of ideology; and the politics of knowledge. The politics of scale lens focuses on the theme of temporal and spatial discounting observed in human societies and how it impacts the allocation of environmental commons and natural resources across space and time. The politics of ideology lens focuses on the themes of risk and uncertainty perception in complex, pluralistic human societies. The politics of knowledge lens focuses on the themes of knowledge and power dynamics in terms of governance and policy designs, such as marketization of climate governance observed in the Kyoto institutional regime.