Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Harvard Environmental Economics Program, International Advisory Board
- Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, Faculty Steering Committee
- Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, Project Management
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Alternative international policy architectures
- Part II Negotiation, assessment, and compliance
- Part III The role and means of technology transfer
- Part IV Global climate policy and international trade
- Part V Economic development, adaptation, and deforestation
- 18 Reconciling human development and climate protection: a multistage hybrid climate policy architecture
- 19 What do we expect from an international climate agreement? A perspective from a low-income country
- 20 Climate accession deals: new strategies for taming growth of greenhouse gases in developing countries
- 21 Policies for developing country engagement
- 22 International forest carbon sequestration in a post-Kyoto agreement
- Part VI Modeling impacts of alternative allocations of responsibility
- Part VII Synthesis and conclusion
- Appendix A Selected List of Individuals Consulted, Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements
- Appendix B Workshops and Conferences, Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements
- Glossary and Abbreviations
- Index
21 - Policies for developing country engagement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Harvard Environmental Economics Program, International Advisory Board
- Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, Faculty Steering Committee
- Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, Project Management
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Alternative international policy architectures
- Part II Negotiation, assessment, and compliance
- Part III The role and means of technology transfer
- Part IV Global climate policy and international trade
- Part V Economic development, adaptation, and deforestation
- 18 Reconciling human development and climate protection: a multistage hybrid climate policy architecture
- 19 What do we expect from an international climate agreement? A perspective from a low-income country
- 20 Climate accession deals: new strategies for taming growth of greenhouse gases in developing countries
- 21 Policies for developing country engagement
- 22 International forest carbon sequestration in a post-Kyoto agreement
- Part VI Modeling impacts of alternative allocations of responsibility
- Part VII Synthesis and conclusion
- Appendix A Selected List of Individuals Consulted, Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements
- Appendix B Workshops and Conferences, Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements
- Glossary and Abbreviations
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Much of the debate surrounding global climate policy focuses on the appropriate role for developing countries in mitigating global emissions—and on how industrialized countries can best support and encourage that role. Climate change is a global problem that requires all major emitting countries to undertake mitigation efforts; moreover, developing countries account for most of the emissions growth projected over the next century. If current developing countries are going to make significant progress towards greater prosperity while the world simultaneously seeks to stabilize atmospheric greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations at somewhere between 450 and 750 parts per million carbon dioxide-equivalent (ppm CO2e), developing countries are going to have to develop in a less GHG-intensive fashion than the already-industrialized economies did (Clarke et al. 2007).
Yet developing countries face considerable obstacles: they lack resources and place greater priority on economic development relative to environmental protection. At the same time, industrialized countries like the United States are well aware that their own efforts to reduce emissions can be thwarted if, through trade in goods and services, their emitting activities shift to non-participants in a climate agreement, or if their GHG cuts are simply overwhelmed by growth elsewhere.
The focus of this chapter is on the intersection of interests between developing and developed countries. How can developed countries—with more resources and, for the most part, a greater sense of urgency— engage developing countries in a cooperative effort to mitigate climate change? Part of the answer is an increasing awareness among developing countries that they themselves are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, which will tend to make them more willing to seek cooperative solutions.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Post-Kyoto International Climate PolicyImplementing Architectures for Agreement, pp. 649 - 681Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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