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Transitions in Policy Architecture

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Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change. Massachusetts Institute of Technology ... Binding agreements follow (not lead) domestic commitment. So. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transitions in Policy Architecture


1
Transitions in Policy Architecture
Henry D. Jacoby Joint Program on the Science and
Policy of Global Change Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
  • IPIECA Workshop
  • Beijing
  • 26 October 2005

2
Opening Thoughts on Regime Building
  • What do we mean by an architecture?
  • A unifying structure that restricts potential
    agreements in ways that simplify negotiations and
    point them toward common goals.
  • Analogies
  • Schools of building design
  • Income vs. expenditure as the basis for taxation
    (e.g., Europe vs. US federal system)

3
The Lure of a Comprehensive Climate Architecture
  • A global commons problem
  • So include all nations from the start
  • Both rich and poor nations are important
  • So agree to base regime on common but
    differentiated responsibilities
  • Many substances contribute to forcing
  • So include all gases in a common system
  • Country cost differences will be inefficient
  • So introduce flexibility mechanisms

4
More Thoughts on Regimes
  • A common view of international process
  • (1) Agree on the structure for negotiations
  • (2) Negotiate commitment levels measures
  • (3) Nations implement control measures
  • For an issue like climate change the process
    begins the other way around
  • Nations only agree to a potentially costly
    commitment if confident they can meet it
  • Binding agreements follow (not lead) domestic
    commitment
  • So . . . expected transition in architecture
  • Favella ?? edifice

5
Shortcomings of Kyoto
  • Local politics drove Protocol text beyond the
    level of commitment of key nations
  • Climate change treated like a traditional
    environmental issue whereas it is more about
    economic policy
  • Insufficient attention to differences in
    governmental structure social priorities
  • US (Congress) vs. parliamentary systems
  • Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico

6
Must Not Disparage the Effort
  • A meaningful long-term response will require a
    comprehensive architecture
  • It is faint criticism to say they (we) reached
    for too much, to soon
  • Montreal provided an attractive model
  • But lessons drawn were not appropriate for a
    problem of different scope scale
  • The search for coherence must continue
  • Stalemate is not a surprise
  • Structure will emerge only from early actions
    (including Kyoto) taken by key large nations

7
For Now, Fragmentation
2005
2008
2012
1st
2nd
Into force 2005
Kyoto (Annex B)
(Non-Annex B)
8
Background for Post-2010 VisionA Scenario of
FCCC Kyoto
  • FCCC and the COP
  • Continued support from all parties
  • But focus shifts to other venues (G8, L20)
  • Kyoto Protocol
  • Survives post-2012 as a softer commitment
  • National measures (e.g., ETS) are permanent
  • CDM
  • Transactions costs keep CER quantities small
    attempts to loosen threaten credibility
  • Post-2012 uncertainty weakens projects
  • Maintained by demand from ETS national systems
    and World Bank caretaking

9
No Shortage of Proposals, e.g.
  • Targets Timetables (extend Kyoto), e.g.,
  • Wealth trigger for accession
  • Hybrid trading with international safety valve
  • Harmonized carbon taxes
  • International fund to buy reductions
  • By direct aid (perhaps development related)
  • Through an emissions trading regime
  • Portfolio of policies and measures
  • Implementation by pledge and review
  • Targets and timetables as only a loose guide
  • Protocol on RD and demonstration

10
As Would-Be Architects Work Uncoordinated
Building Proceeds
  • Proliferation of CDM-like deal-making, with
    inconsistent definitions
  • Sub-group pledge review, by sector
  • Design standards
  • Ad-hoc linking of trading systems
  • Among Kyoto parties with nations outside
  • Sub-nation but across borders (New England, SW
    USA and NW Mexico)
  • Non-CO2 gases as a separate target
  • Diverse individual national programs

11
Diverse National Programs
  • Voluntary schemes MOUs
  • Regulations and standards
  • Subsidies to low-CO2 technologies
  • Carbon prices
  • CO2 fuel taxes . . . subsidy removal
  • Cap-and-trade systems
  • RDD and commercial demonstration
  • Financial and technology transfers

12
Transition to an Architecture
  • For some years a climate favela
  • Kyoto Protocol and other arrangements
  • Many meetings but little progress
  • Serious discussions only after two nations start
    independent, domestic action
  • The US
  • Beyond RD, subsidies and voluntary measures
  • Processes under way . . . And the timing?
  • China
  • Some action and contingent commitments
  • Processes under way? . . . And the timing?

13
Scenario or Exhortation?
  • The intent here description not prescription
  • Not argue that parallel movement is equitable
  • Only present a view of needed steps even given
    actions by the EU and other parties
  • No clear view of the ultimate structure
  • Is a global architecture possible?
  • Coordination after messy start should be easy
    compared to the difficulty of first commitments
  • Action by these two big nations is a necessary
    condition for serious negotiation of a
    substantial common global effort

14
While Waiting, Seek Low-Cost Gains
  • The timing is bad for achievement of frequently
    discussed Article 2 goals
  • A favela regime may be all we get for many
    years, but will lower climate risk

15
Thank You
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