Title of article
How far can developing country commitments go in an immediate post-2012 climate regime?
Author/Authors
ZhongXiang Zhang، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
5
From page
1753
To page
1757
Abstract
To point out the direction and focus of future international climate negotiations, this paper discusses how far developing country commitments can go in an immediate post-2012 climate regime. The paper argues that developing country commitments are most unlikely to go beyond the defined polices and measures in this timeframe. On this basis, the paper suggests that, rather than attempting the unrealistic goal, international climate negotiations may instead need to initially frame the post-2012 developing country participation in terms of certain policies and policies that I envisioned a decade ago. This conclusion does not change, as Barack Obama becomes the US President and the Democrats have regained control over both US House of Representatives and Senate. However, it should be emphasized that his stance on climate issues and how ambitious US commitments would be under his administration are going to be critical for developing countries to take bold steps themselves and to even agree to reflect those national commitments in a global deal.
Keywords
Post-Kyoto climate negotiations , Policies and measures , Developing countries
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
972613
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