Title: International Climate Change Policy: an introduction
1International Climate Change Policy an
introduction
- Lecture
- Thursday 18 September
- Stephen Howes, Crawford School, ANU
2The problem
3The solution?
4The free-rider problem/prisoners dilemma
- Climate change mitigation is a pure international
public good. - There is no global government.
- Every country has an incentive to free ride.
- Climate change mitigation is an intertemporal
public good - Governments dont represent the unborn.
- Every generation has an incentive to free ride.
5The history
6UNFCCC
- Agreed 1992, came into force 1994, 192 Parties
(everyone) - Articulates a global goal of stabilization of
atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. - Everyone called on to take action against climate
change but on the basis of equity and in
accordance with their common but differentiated
responsibilities and respective capabilities
developed countries (Annex I) - should take the lead in combating climate change
and the adverse effects thereof - Should bear the cost of the financing needed by
the developing country Parties to meet the agreed
full incremental costs of implementing measures
7Kyoto Protocol
- Agreed 1997, came into force 2005, without US and
Australian backing. - Commits developed and transition countries commit
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions national
targets collective effort of 5 in 2008-12 from
1990. - Clever treaty
- Embodies the principle that developed countries
move first. - Embodies flexibility (when, what and where)
- Implementation deficient.
8Kyoto Protocol
9Bali Roadmap to Copenhagen
- A road with two tracks
- The Protocol track to reach agreement on second
commitment period. - The Convention track to work towards a shared
vision for long-term cooperative action - Developed countries to consider nationally
appropriate mitigation commitments or actions,
including quantified emission limitiation and
reduction objectives - Developing countries to consider measurable
reportable and verifiable mitigation actions
supported and enabled by technology, financing
and capacity-building. - How far does this take us from the Convention of
1992?
10Prospects for an agreement
11The good news only a few countries matter
12The bad news the stand-off
- Developing countries
- Have the most to lose in the future from climate
change - But face the most pressing current concerns
- Will dominate future emissions growth
- But have low per capita emissions and low
cumulative emissions - Perceive the developed world as not having
fulfilled its side of the bargain.
13Cumulative emissions
14Per capita emissions
15- Developed countries
- Focus on future emissions, and the futility of
cutting developed country emissions if developing
country emissions continue to grow rapidly.
16Future emissions to 2030
17Future emissions to 2100
Annex I declines from 47 in 2005 to 29 in 2030
to 18 in 2100
18The ozone problem a relevant parallel
- A successful agreement.
- Involved quantitative targets, and the West
paying. - But
- A few countries AND a few (unimportant) sectors
AND good technological solutions AND good CBA AND
quicker payback AND no scientific controversy - However, no other route?
19The way forward
20Principles for accelerating action
- Developed country leadership
- Developed countries do SOMETHING even if
developing countries do NOTHING - Developing country participation
- Developed countries do MORE but developing
countries do SOMETHING - Regional and individual initiative needed
- Building on existing architecture
21How to structure a global agreement
- Three key agreements
- A global emissions trajectory
- Agreed national emissions actions
- Agreed international collaborative actions
221. A global emissions trajectory
- With what total emissions?
- With what release of emissions over time?
- With a commitment over what period of time?
23Emissions trajectories
24Concentration trajectories
252. Agreed national emissions actions
- Key debates
- Quantity or price?
- If quantity, around what allocation principle?
- Binding or voluntary?
- Uniform or flexible?
26The quantity-price debate
- The debate operates at two levels
- The international level (my focus)
- The national level
- At the international level,
- Key arguments for the price approach
- Avoid a distributional debate
- Avoid international trade
- Embed flexibility
- Key arguments for the quantity approach
- Building on existing systems
- Difficulties of commiting in terms of policies
- Can obtain flexibility through other means
- Commit in terms of entitlement, which provides
trading opportunities for developing countries. - Important to realize that this is only one of
many debates
27Garnaut Approach
- Binding targets for high income countries and
China. - Treat 2020 as a transition period for developing
countries. - One-way targets for other developing countries
till 2020 - No targets for least developed countries till
2020. - Protection of emissions in developing countries
till 2020 through linkage to growth rates. - Have a framework for the allocation of emission
entitlements.
28Contraction and convergence
- Move over time to a per capita allocation of
emissions. - Key parameters
- Starting date
- Convergence date
- Trajectory between the two
29Illustration for 550 scenario
30Illustration for 450 scenario
31Summary targets
32Agreed international collaborative actions
- International public funding for mitigation and
adaptation - International public good justification
- Equity justification.
- Incentive provision
- Sectoral agreements
- WTO
33Postscript on geoengineering
- Greenhouse gases only one cause of global warming
- You can increase aerosols, cloud cover, earth
reflectiveness. - These will all counter warming.
- Advantages
- They get round the international prisoners
dillemma. - They are cheap
- They are quick-acting.
34- Disadvantages
- Unknown side effects (and some known)
- Climate wars?
- May weaken mitigation effort
- Only a partial solution (will not save the sea)
- What to do?
- More research