• Anglický jazyk

A climate for change

Autor: Dirk Heine

Essay from the year 2007 in the subject Business economics - Economic Policy, , course: Harvard College China-India Development and Relations Symposium, New York 03-04/2007, 0 entries in the bibliography, language: English, abstract: One of the major vindications... Viac o knihe

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O knihe

Essay from the year 2007 in the subject Business economics - Economic Policy, , course: Harvard College China-India Development and Relations Symposium, New York 03-04/2007, 0 entries in the bibliography, language: English, abstract: One of the major vindications for the US not signing Kyoto is that the treaty does not contain any legally
binding emission reduction targets for China and India, although these countries have become respectively
the second and fifth biggest emitter of CO2. India and China -in return- claim that a path of development
that would not harm the climate is too expensive for them; the West has to pay for a historical
responsibility that stems from its past emissions, which brought about anthropogenic climate change in the
first place. In this way the blame is passed from one nation to the other, and in the meantime all three
countries keep on increasing their gross emissions. The essay identifies that part of the problem is the
current perspective in intergovernmental emission reduction negotiation. All negotiation is about how much
the global top-polluters agree to reduce their emissions. Kyoto left open to what value of CO2-equivalent
countries ultimately have to reduce their emissions. Thus it was also not possible to tell how much India
and China can increase their emissions. The essay rationalises how the exclusiveness of a top-down
negotiation increases the cost of climate change mitigation in the US, as in China and India, by constricting
the US-suggestion of international CO2-emission trading to the inflexible Clean Development Mechanism.
It describes how China and India could be integrated into emissions trading by setting a definite limit to
each country's emissions of CO2-equivalent. Here John Rawl's Original Position is used to identify that this
value should be found on a per-capita basis. The essay follows on to analyse the effect that the introduction
of such a huge new market would have on the Sino-Indian region compared to the West, and additionally
how it could alter the economic relationships between China and India. The essay then presents two ideas
on how the cost of this trading scheme would be divided between economically more developed countries
and less economically developed countries, in order to improve the political feasibility of the concept.
Finally, the essay explains how linking each nation's gross amount of emission permits to the population
size at a base year could give a strong economic incentive towards all countries world-wide to lower their
populations.

  • Vydavateľstvo: GRIN Verlag
  • Rok vydania: 2007
  • Formát: Paperback
  • Rozmer: 210 x 148 mm
  • Jazyk: Anglický jazyk
  • ISBN: 9783638794206

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