The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime
The current commitments under the Paris Agreement are not enough to achieve the 1,5 °C target. Even if states comply with their national targets, temperatures will increase between 2.4 °C and 3.8 °C; in average 3 °C (CAT, 2018). Hence, governments and international organizations hope that non-state...
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doaj-8b15f9246c274142bf2de1278d3890b22020-11-25T03:55:05ZengElsevierEarth System Governance2589-81162019-04-012100028The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regimeMareike Blum0Eva Lövbrand1University of Freiburg, Chair of Forest and Environmental Policy, Tennenbacher Str. 4, 79104, Freiburg, Germany; Corresponding author.Linköping University, Department of Thematic Studies, 581 83, Linköping, SwedenThe current commitments under the Paris Agreement are not enough to achieve the 1,5 °C target. Even if states comply with their national targets, temperatures will increase between 2.4 °C and 3.8 °C; in average 3 °C (CAT, 2018). Hence, governments and international organizations hope that non-state actors help to close the ambition gap. Article 6 of the Paris Agreement provides a “new home” for the carbon offsetting community at the interface of public and private climate action. As the negotiations continue, we can expect multiple storylines that offer competing interpretations of what counts as promising market governance. Private standard-setters are taking part in these debates and are considered as frontrunners in enabling ambitious offsetting practices. This paper examines the discursive legitimation of the Gold Standard in light of the emerging narratives about new market arrangements under Article 6. Rather than pre-defining legitimacy requirements, our study draws attention to the discursive sources of (de)legitimation.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589811619300278Climate governanceNon-state actorsCarbon marketsGold standard |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mareike Blum Eva Lövbrand |
spellingShingle |
Mareike Blum Eva Lövbrand The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime Earth System Governance Climate governance Non-state actors Carbon markets Gold standard |
author_facet |
Mareike Blum Eva Lövbrand |
author_sort |
Mareike Blum |
title |
The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime |
title_short |
The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime |
title_full |
The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime |
title_fullStr |
The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime |
title_full_unstemmed |
The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime |
title_sort |
return of carbon offsetting? the discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the paris climate regime |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Earth System Governance |
issn |
2589-8116 |
publishDate |
2019-04-01 |
description |
The current commitments under the Paris Agreement are not enough to achieve the 1,5 °C target. Even if states comply with their national targets, temperatures will increase between 2.4 °C and 3.8 °C; in average 3 °C (CAT, 2018). Hence, governments and international organizations hope that non-state actors help to close the ambition gap. Article 6 of the Paris Agreement provides a “new home” for the carbon offsetting community at the interface of public and private climate action. As the negotiations continue, we can expect multiple storylines that offer competing interpretations of what counts as promising market governance. Private standard-setters are taking part in these debates and are considered as frontrunners in enabling ambitious offsetting practices. This paper examines the discursive legitimation of the Gold Standard in light of the emerging narratives about new market arrangements under Article 6. Rather than pre-defining legitimacy requirements, our study draws attention to the discursive sources of (de)legitimation. |
topic |
Climate governance Non-state actors Carbon markets Gold standard |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589811619300278 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mareikeblum thereturnofcarbonoffsettingthediscursivelegitimationofnewmarketarrangementsintheparisclimateregime AT evalovbrand thereturnofcarbonoffsettingthediscursivelegitimationofnewmarketarrangementsintheparisclimateregime AT mareikeblum returnofcarbonoffsettingthediscursivelegitimationofnewmarketarrangementsintheparisclimateregime AT evalovbrand returnofcarbonoffsettingthediscursivelegitimationofnewmarketarrangementsintheparisclimateregime |
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