International Climate Politics Flashcards

1
Q

How did the new politics of global environmental change occur?

A
  • Persistence and intensification of old pollution problems and growth of new issues (Weale, 1992)
  • Weather extremes including severe drought in US, hurricanes in the Caribbean
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2
Q

What are the new politics of global environmental change in 1988?

A
  • New politics reflected new scale of problems, including their international dimensions, interaction with policy and ideological conceptions of policy issues (Weale, 1992)
  • Formation of the IPCC
  • 1988 Toronto Conference
    • Toronto Target – reduce emissions to 1988 levels by 2000 and further reduction of 20% from 1988 levels by 2005
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3
Q

What was the early language of the IPCC

A
  • The language of early warnings was different to what we see today: more withheld and higher possibility of uncertainty
  • “Some confidence”; “likely”; “details of the changes are still poorly understood” (Patterson, 1996)
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4
Q

What is the role of the IPCC?

A
  • Provide a clear scientific view on current state of knowledge in climate change and its potential impact
  • Do not conduct research nor monitor climate related data, rather reviews and assess most recent information
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5
Q

What are the critiques of the IPCC?

A
  • Was it the science or organisation of the science that mattered?
  • Does need for consensus in reports make it too conservative or cautious?
    • No linear model
    • Different truths for different forms of power
    • Oil producing companies able to emphasise the uncertainties (Paterson, 1996)
  • Science (facts) -> Power (values)
    • Speaking Truth to Power
    • Knowledge closure -> policy choice
    • Politicising significance of the threat of climate change into required action
    • IPCC scientists have to be screened by government – US government has vetoed a scientist pro action in the past
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6
Q

How many people signed onto the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change

A

154 countries in 1992

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7
Q

What are the commitments of the 1997 Kyoto Porotocl?

A
  • Binds 37 industrialized (annex 1) countries to reduce emissions below 1990 levels during period of 2008-2012
  • Japan by an average of 6%
  • USA by average of 7%
  • EU by an average of 8%
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8
Q

What are the instruments implemented by the Kyoto Protocol?

A
  • Clean Development Mechanism - assist developing countries in achieving sustainable development
  • Join Implementation – Any Annex I country can invest in an emission reduction project in any other Annex I country as an alternative to reducing emissions domestically
  • Emissions Trading
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9
Q

What events are regarded as critical in international climate change politics?

A
  • Paris 2015
  • Rio 1992 –agenda 21 (role of all actors of society to engage with global efforts)
  • Copenhagen 2009 is often placed with a black mark –civil societies were not allowed in and it fell apart on last day
    • But led to Cancun 2010 happening
  • Kyoto Protocol –Bush did not sign USA on
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10
Q

How have the Alliance of Small Island States been critical in international climate change politics?

A
  • Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) - a key driver in history of nation state action, in order to have a stronger voice compared to major polluters
  • Worked closely with London based legal group (FIELD), which suggests fragility of rigid distinctions about who exercises power and authority in governance of climate change (Bulkeley and Newell, 2015)
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11
Q

What pivotal piece of information was published in the IPCC 5th Assessment Report?

A

Concludes human influence on climate system is clear

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12
Q

What has the UNFCCC produced?

A
  • International commitment
  • Mechanism to support development of carbon markets and finance
  • Adaption fund to compensate countries for damage suffered in relation to climate change
  • Global movement for action on climate change
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13
Q

What were the outcomes of COP 21 in Paris 2015?

A
  • Ambitiously intended nationally determined contributions
  • Long-term finance mobilised to drive transition
  • Action Agenda to demonstrate commitment by non-state actors to a reach a new legal agreement
  • Headliners:
    • Keep global temperatures below 2C and aim for 1.5C
    • Scale ambition of targets and review every 5 years
    • Provide ‘climate finance’ to developing countries
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14
Q

What does the complexity of climate change stem from?

A
  1. Multiple scales of political decision
    • Global as a casual rather than a spatial category
    • Multilevel problem rather than global – local, regional, national and international
  2. Fragmented and blurred roles of state and non-state actors
    • Shell emits more than Saudi; Amoco more than Canada; Mobil more than Australia
    • Changing nature of the state in current era of neo-liberal economic reform – privatized energy markets; growing power of the individual consumers
  3. Embedded nature of the many processes that lead to emissions of GHG in everyday production and consumption mechanisms

Bulkeley and Newell, 2015

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15
Q

Argument about cliamte science becoming political?

A
  • Foucault’s argument of power and knowledge directly implying one another
  • Worlds of science and politics overlap
    • Scientists as ‘knowledge brokers’ funded by governments
  • Governance issues and challenges
    • Key deal-brokers in climate governance have changed in a way that reflects shifts in economic power in the global power
    • Support for market mechanisms as preferred way to govern climate change in spite of record reflect geo-political and economic shifts.
    • Domestic arenas of global powers carries global repercussions: e.g. US’s domestic politics playing out globally in Paris 2015
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