The economics and politics of climate change

The economics and politics of climate change

Helm, Dieter
Hepburn, Cameron

36,56 €(IVA inc.)

The volume brings together leading climate change policy experts to set out the economic analysis and the nature of the negotiations at the United NationsClimate Change Conference in Copenhagen and beyond. The international framework for a climate change agreement is up for review as the initial Kyoto periodto 2012 comes to an end. Though there has been much enthusiasm from politicaland environmental groups, the underlying economics and politics remain highlycontroversial. This book takes a cool headed look at the critical roadblocks to agreement, examining the economics of climate change, the incentives of themain players (the US, EU, China) and examines the policies governmentscan put in place to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and ultimately shift oureconomies onto a low-carbon path. The volume brings together leading climate change policy experts to set out the economic analysis and the nature of the negotiations at Copenhagen and beyond. In addition to reviewing themain issues discussed above, a number of the articles question the basis of much of the climate change consensus, and debate the Stern Report's main findings.The book is in four parts. Following an overview of the main issues, the first part is a reassessment of the economics of climate change. This is fundamental to the rest of the volume, and it contains new material which goes well beyond what might be called the new conventional wisdom. The second part looks atthe geography of the costs and benefits of climate change - the very different perspectives of Africa, China, the US and Europe. These chapters provide a building block to considering theprospects for a new global agreement - the very different interests that willhave to be reconciled at Copenhagen and beyond. The third part looks at policy instruments at the global level (whereas much of the literature to date is nationally and regionally based). Trading and R&D feature in thechapters, but so too do more radical unilateral options, including geo-engineering. Part four turns to the institutional architecture - drawing on evidencefrom previous attempts in other areas, as well as proposals for new bodies. INDICE: Introduction Part One: Revisiting the Economics of Climate Change Climate-change policy: why has so little been achieved? The global deal on climate change Climate treaties and the imperative of enforcement The implications of rapid development for emissions and climate-change mitigation The behavioural economics of climate change Part Two: The Global Players and Agreements Climate change and Africa China's balance of emissions embodied in trade: approaches to measurement and allocating international responsibility India and climate-change mitigation Addressing climate change with a comprehensive US cap-and-trade system EU climate-change policy: a critique Part Three: Low-carbon Technologies Nuclear power, climate change, and energy policy Carbon dioxide capture and storage Climate-change mitigation from renewable energy: its contribution and cost The national inventory approach for international forest-carbon sequestration management On the regulation of geo-engineering Improving energyefficiency: hidden costs and unintended consequences Part Four: National and International Instruments Carbon taxes, emissions trading and hybrid schemes Docking into a global carbon market: Clean Investment Budgets to finance low-carbon economic development International carbon finance and the Clean Development Mechanism Part Five: Institutional Architecture The global climate-change regime: a defence Governing climate change: lessons from other governance regimes Bibliography

  • ISBN: 978-0-19-960627-6
  • Editorial: Oxford University
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 576
  • Fecha Publicación: 15/09/2011
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés