Ethical questions of fairness, responsibility, and burden-sharing have always been central to the international politics of climate change and efforts to construct an effective intergovernmental response to this problem. The conclusion of the Paris Agreement last December, lauded by the media, governments, and civil society around the world, is the most recent such effort, following the collapse of negotiations six years prior at the 2009 Copenhagen conference. The shape and form of the Paris Agreement, however, represents a radically different governance structure to its predecessor, the Kyoto Protocol, reorienting the international regime toward a “bottom-up” structure, emphasizing national flexibility in order to ensure broader participation. In doing so, the Paris Agreement also provides a different answer to the question of what constitutes a fair and equitable response to climate change.
The purpose of this essay is to review the normative implications of the Paris Agreement, namely in the challenges it poses for attaining a fair distribution of the “carbon budget” and for maintaining a good chance of keeping global warming below 2 degrees Celsius by the end of the century. In these new institutional arrangements and political compromises that have set the framework for climate action in the coming decade and beyond, how will fairness and equity be ensured in a world of voluntary climate “contributions”? The first section of this essay presents the key features of the Paris Agreement in the context of the “top-down/bottom-up” discussion on governance architectures and the notion of a carbon budget that has framed much of the recent ethics-based discussion on the distribution of emission rights and responsibilities. The second section then highlights the new ways in which the Paris Agreement has sought to respond to the normative importance of equity considerations in the climate response, namely, in its accommodation of “national circumstances” as a context for fairness. Finally, this essay points to the more positive implications of this emphasis on national circumstances—particularly regarding the new opportunities for argumentation and social scrutiny that claims of being “fair” and “ambitious” are subject to that will need to be used to ensure that the new climate architecture delivers on its promise.
The Paris Agreement and Carbon Budgets in a Bottom-up Architecture
After four years of intergovernmental preparatory meetings, countries adopted the Paris Agreement by consensus at the 21st Conference of the Parties of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). At its heart is a commitment by all countries to submit a “nationally determined contribution” to the global effort to address climate change over the 2020–2030 decade—especially, but not exclusively, in terms of emissions reduction.Footnote 1 Over the course of 2015, countries had submitted indicative contributions, referred to as “intended nationally determined contributions” (INDCs), which had been estimated to lead to no less than 2.7 degrees Celsius of global warming by the end of the century—well above the 2 degrees Celsius that had been the agreed target since the ill-fated Copenhagen conference.Footnote 2
INDCs (or simply NDCs, once they are formally communicated by countries upon ratifying the Paris Agreement) took a range of forms. Some countries submitted pledges to reduce emissions against a business-as-usual baseline; others to reduce their emission intensity (of greenhouse gas emissions per unit of GDP); and others to make absolute net reductions in emissions. By the close of the conference, almost every country in the world had made such a submission, and this broad participation is widely seen as one of the Paris Agreement's major achievements. Another major achievement was the collective reaffirmation of the below-2-degrees-Celsius target previously set out in Copenhagen; and for the first time, incorporation of the more aspirational goal of “pursuing efforts” to keep warming to below 1.5 degrees Celsius, responding to a demand made by island states, African countries, and other vulnerable nations since Copenhagen.Footnote 3
One of the key features of the INDCs, as their name suggests, is their nationally determined character: that is, their content will be the decision of states alone, and not subject to international negotiation or revision. They will be “contributions,” and not “commitments,” a much softer version of the language traditionally used in such international treaty processes.Footnote 4 Taken cumulatively, the INDCs are what best epitomize the overall character of the new bottom-up approach to climate governance embedded in the Paris Agreement.
This design can be best understood through a comparison to the last legally binding international agreement on climate change, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, and by examining the ensuing discussions about the appropriate institutional “architecture” to govern the global response to climate change, particularly surrounding the 2009 Copenhagen conference.Footnote 5 The Kyoto Protocol's quantified targets to reduce emissions were subject to negotiation, with both their character (legally binding, economy-wide absolute reductions) and timetables established at the international level. They included strong rules on how to account for emissions and report progress, and an international mechanism for compliance.Footnote 6 In these ways—although imperfectly so—the Kyoto Protocol represents the “top-down” architectural model for climate cooperation,Footnote 7 embodying a particular understanding of fairness in the differentiation of its targets, with only developed countries taking on quantified emission reduction obligations.Footnote 8
By contrast, in most respects (with the exception of the below-2-degrees temperature target), the Paris Agreement constitutes a turn toward a bottom-up architecture whereby explicit international coordination is eschewed in favor of increased national flexibility. Countries have the latitude to make their own pledges, determining both their character and timing, with an emphasis on facilitative transparency rather than on punitive compliance. The Paris Agreement as a whole is legally binding, but the quantitative pledges themselves are not.
Where does this evolution in the governance structure of the international regime leave efforts to ensure an equitable response to climate change? The important point for this analysis is that ethical considerations for the international distribution of emission mitigation responsibilities have often assumed a top-down architecture. One particular fact has loomed large over the myriad proposals that have been made concerning fairness and justice in global mitigation efforts: if humanity is to stand a likely chance of meeting the goal of below 2 degrees, the cumulative amount of carbon emitted into the atmosphere must be limited to below one trillion tons of carbon since industrialization began, of which more than half has already been emitted.Footnote 9 In other words, there is a quantified amount of carbon that can be emitted, a quantity that decreases further still if the aspiration of below 1.5 degrees is to be met.Footnote 10 As a result, the efforts described above have often focused on the idea of a carbon budget, with one major challenge being how to distribute this budget fairly.Footnote 11
Some scholars have focused on what are the appropriate moral principles and perspectives on which to base such distributions.Footnote 12 Others, meanwhile, have proceeded to put these in quantitative terms, calculating precise carbon budgets for individual countries, each in terms of its “fair share,” generally based on a balance of a country's historical responsibility for emissions and its capacity to reduce emissions given development needs.Footnote 13 The general logic in this regard is to begin with the desired temperature goal, calculate the remaining carbon budget, establish principles (moral or otherwise) on how to distribute the budget, and then calculate each country's share accordingly. Of course, each analysis along these lines also offers a different definition of how to specify each of the criteria that contribute to these budgets, resulting in a further diversity of proposed budget allocations.Footnote 14 But what all these different analyses have in common is that they all assume that such distribution is both desirable and possible, and that such apportioning to reach a fair share can be done through top-down coordination at the international level.
By contrast, all the Paris Agreement does in this respect is entrench the desired temperature goal of below 2 degrees Celsius (and its more ambitious aspiration of below 1.5 degrees Celsius). There has been no agreement on the size of the budget, on principles to distribute it, or on what each country's fair share should be. Indeed, there has been no agreement on the very notion of a budget itself, as illustrated by former UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres's comment that “politically [carbon budgets] would be too difficult.”Footnote 15 Developed countries will generally continue to “take the lead,” and in other aspects, particularly on climate finance to support both mitigation and adaptation, they still have specific obligations,Footnote 16 but this is a far cry from the particular understanding of fairness embodied in the Kyoto Protocol. A sizeable “emissions gap” between current pledges and the trajectory of emission reductions needed to stay within the carbon budget still exists.Footnote 17
Whither Equity? The Rise of Nationally Determined Climate Fairness
In place of a general bargain in which fairness is chiefly reflected in the differentiation of commitments, the Paris Agreement's expression of fairness and equity represents the new preference for bottom-up flexibility. The issue of how fairness is to be safeguarded in a bottom-up architecture has received relatively little explicit attention,Footnote 18 with most justifications emphasizing political participation and efficiency as its key benefits. Instead, the key provision in the Paris Agreement architecture is a requirement that states themselves justify the fairness and “ambition” of their own contributions.
In preparation for the Paris summit, countries agreed at the preceding conference in Lima, Peru, in 2014, on procedures for submitting INDCs prior to Paris. Among the criteria for submitting an INDC was the specification that it would indicate how it is considered “fair and ambitious, in light of its national circumstances, and how it contributes towards achieving the objective of the Convention as set out in its Article 2.”Footnote 19 This represents something of an innovation in treaty design, where the fairness of individual commitments is usually implicitly reached through the process of negotiation and the resulting differentiation of responsibilities, rather than explicitly articulated.Footnote 20 While this exercise in self-assessment and self-justification of fairness is also an acknowledgement of the continuing normative pull of fairness in the climate regime (as indicated by the fact that almost all countries met this requirement, despite its nonbinding characterFootnote 21 ), the result has inevitably been partly an instrumental exercise.Footnote 22 From no country has there been or will there be acknowledgement that its contribution is unfair or unambitious, or that it does not appropriately contribute to achieving the objective of the Framework Convention. Nonetheless, the cumulative result of almost every country detailing its self-perception of fairness highlights the degree to which principles of fairness receive widespread support, even if convergence on such principles is viewed as impossible. The synthesis report prepared by the UNFCCC secretariat, taking stock of INDCs submitted up to the end of April 2016, reflected this diversity of criteria in terms of fairness, which included “responsibility and capability; share of emissions; development and/or technological capacity; mitigation potential; cost of mitigation actions; the degree of progression or stretching beyond the current level of effort; and the link to objectives and global goals.”Footnote 23
At the same time, the report also highlighted the view that convergence on the specific combination of principles and criteria is impossible: “no single indicator can accurately reflect fairness or a globally equitable distribution of Parties' efforts.”Footnote 24 A number of examples illustrate the diversity of these conceptions of fairness.Footnote 25 The United States declares that its “fair and ambitious . . . action to achieve the 2025 target represents a substantial acceleration of the current pace” of emission reductions.Footnote 26 The European Union's target “represents a significant progression beyond its current undertaking . . . consistent with the need for at least halving global emissions by 2050 compared to 1990.”Footnote 27 South Africa, among a handful of countries that do express their INDC in terms of a carbon budget, justifies its mitigation pledge being less than what its share of the global carbon budget might allow, and it also points to the “significant rigidity in its economy,” noting that “any policy-driven transition to a low-carbon and climate resilient society must take into account and emphasize its overriding priority to address poverty and inequality.”Footnote 28 Australia asserts that its contribution constitutes a “significant progression” beyond its previous target for 2020, noting that it “is comparable to the targets of other advanced economies” and “takes account of Australia's unique national circumstances, including [its] role as a leading global resources provider . . . and higher than average abatement costs.”Footnote 29
For India, “both in terms of cumulative global emissions (only 3%) and per capita emissions (1.56 tCO2e in 2010), [the country's] contribution to the problem of climate change is limited, but its actions are fair and ambitious. . . . Efforts to avoid emissions during our development process are also tied to the availability and level of international financing and technology transfer, since India still faces complex developmental challenges.”Footnote 30 Meanwhile, Bangladesh cites its status as a Least Developed Country “whose emissions are less than 0.35% of global emissions” and notes that its “per capita [greenhouse gas] emissions will not exceed the average for developing countries.” It further notes that the INDC “represents the first time that Bangladesh has made an undertaking to take action on mitigation.”Footnote 31
What is notable in these discussions of climate fairness is that the different national circumstances of countries have now become paramount. The UNFCCC's synthesis report summarizes the wide range of circumstances cited by countries to justify the fairness of their contributions, including
the need for poverty eradication and the improvement of living standards; population structure and urban density; the impacts of local or regional conflicts; economic development and the current industrial structure (e.g., share of energy-intense or energy-efficient industries; or if it is a fossil fuel producing or exporting country); energy mix and related limitations; economic diversification processes; dependence on the global supply chain for food and energy security; sensitivity to the volatility of regional and global developments; the size and geography of the country; climatic conditions; natural resource endowment, including for renewable energy; and vulnerability to climate change impacts, including dependency on climate-sensitive sectors such as agriculture, tourism and water.Footnote 32
In other words, in this bottom-up architecture, national circumstances have become the watchwords of fairness and ambition. Efforts and contributions are shaped not by fairness in the context of the science of the international carbon budget, but by fairness in the context of individual circumstances, or, as the secretariat put it, “National determination has enabled Parties to shape their efforts in line with their circumstances.”Footnote 33 Notably, the overall objective of the Paris Agreement is framed in the context of the long-standing principle of “common but different responsibilities and respective capabilities,” but followed with a new, deeply fought-over qualifier: “in the light of different national circumstances.”Footnote 34
Before turning to other elements of how fairness is conceptualized in the Paris Agreement's architecture, it is important to note one important effect of contextualizing fairness in terms of national circumstances: the question of the actual distribution of emission responsibilities and obligations is absent from formal negotiations. The content of national contributions themselves is not the subject of negotiation; instead, much of the focus of dispute in the negotiating process leading up to the Paris Agreement was over the process by which countries would make these submissions. Thus, the other lauded elements of the Paris Agreement are process-related provisions intended to drive increasingly demanding pledges over time. Chief among these is a “global stocktake” in 2023 (the midpoint of the first five-year cycle of contributions) and increased transparency procedures to allow mutual understanding of the actions of others.
Normative Argumentation in a Bottom-up World
The Paris Agreement provides a global temperature goal, but avoids implementing the idea of a finite carbon budget, which critics say is a major limitation of the new treaty. On the positive side, however, the broader bottom-up orientation of the agreement opens new opportunities for normative debate on fairness and equity in national responses to climate change. The overarching rationale of the bottom-up architecture is that increasing national flexibility and discretion in determining climate contributions encourages broader participation. Broader participation, in turn, is supposed to support and encourage collective increases in the ambition of contributions. In this respect, at least, the Paris Agreement marks the emergence of a new norm and social expectation that INDCs should, in the words of the UNFCCC's 2014 Lima decision, “represent a progression beyond the current undertaking” of each country.Footnote 35 As stated in the formal Agreement,
Each Party's successive nationally determined contribution will represent a progression beyond the Party's then current nationally determined contribution and reflect its highest possible ambition, reflecting its common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances.Footnote 36
Beyond this new principle, however, what may be of more lasting importance is the social character of this nationally determined self-assessment of fairness provided in INDCs. In other words, these public claims of fairness are subject to contestation and argumentation in order to become socially accepted as being genuinely fair and ambitious. These assessments and arguments may necessarily be informal ones,Footnote 37 but civil society actors are already undertaking such critiques at both the international and domestic level. One notable assessment, for instance, finds Russia's INDC representing a zero percent contribution to its fair share, the United States' INDC representing a one-fifth contribution of its fair share, Brazil's representing a two-thirds contribution, and, conversely, China's contribution actually exceeding its fair share.Footnote 38
Indeed, countries may increasingly be starting to undertake similar critiques of each other's pledges, albeit in an informal manner. Brazil's environment minister, for instance, highlighted Singapore's and South Korea's INDCs as being “inexcusable” given their relative prosperity.Footnote 39 And those countries that did not submit an INDC prior to the September 2015 deadline for the Paris conference were singled out as “climate laggards”—an indication of how the INDC submission has itself become a common measure of good international citizenship.Footnote 40
Such critiques and public discussion over the social acceptance of the fairness claims made by a particular country may not on their own lead to a revision of that country's pledged contribution. But they do suggest the beginning of a different dynamic in the new bottom-up context of self-differentiation, where fairness and equity are discussed in terms of individual national contributions, rather than in terms of annexes or categories that divide countries simply into “developed” or “developing.” Countries that may have previously been able to “hide” in these broad categories may find that they are no longer able to do so, and that they are subject to greater scrutiny than hitherto experienced and singled out for the quality and content of their national contributions.Footnote 41
Conclusion
This essay has sought to draw out some of the ethical implications of the new bottom-up architecture embodied in the Paris Agreement on climate change. Further institutional arrangements, particularly in terms of transparency and reporting processes, and the new market mechanisms for carbon trading that have also been the subject of much moral analysis, are still to be developed in the interim few years before the Paris Agreement enters into force. What the Agreement has established, however, is an orientation toward bottom-up governance, whereby national flexibility extends to the way that fairness, equity, and ambition are considered. These themes are now explicitly contextualized by diverse national circumstances, providing countries with greater flexibility even as the world as a whole moves ever closer toward emitting the trillionth ton of carbon.
It is these institutional arrangements, and the prospects for achieving climate justice within them, that invite further scholarly engagement given the relative permanence that these arrangements will have for organizing climate action for the coming decade and beyond. While the discussion here has focused on the mitigation aspects in relation to fairness and the distribution of the carbon budget, the implications of the Paris Agreement's architecture for other elements of climate justice, especially in terms of fairness in adaptation responses and the rising prominence of “loss and damage” beyond the limits of adaptation, also deserve closer examination.Footnote 42 A new conversation on how to safeguard the future is just beginning.