Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies

Climate negotiations have been going on for the last two decades and the awareness for impacts of climate change has improved substantially. However, the trends of global CO2 emissions did not reveal any encouraging signs, with developing countries emitting even more CO2 and industrialized nations s...

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Main Authors: Sudhakar Yedla, Sandhya Garg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Institute for International Economic Policy 2014-09-01
Series:East Asian Economic Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2014.18.3.283
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spelling doaj-b768dc245ced404f89150c094fd91a5b2020-11-24T23:27:26ZengKorea Institute for International Economic PolicyEast Asian Economic Review2508-16402508-16672014-09-01183277299http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2014.18.3.283Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies Sudhakar Yedla 0Sandhya Garg 1Professor, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR)PhD Student, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR)Climate negotiations have been going on for the last two decades and the awareness for impacts of climate change has improved substantially. However, the trends of global CO2 emissions did not reveal any encouraging signs, with developing countries emitting even more CO2 and industrialized nations showing no signs of reducing emissions to below their 1990 levels. In order to meet the ambitious targets set by the Stern report for the next two decades, it is important to find new and path-breaking approaches to climate change. This paper attempts to analyze the use of carbon/development space historically, at present and in the future with a focus on equity. Trends analysis focuses on the last two decades (Post Rio) and the carbon budget based analysis considers a period of 1850-2050. Industrialized countries are found to have significantly overshot their budgeted allocation for the last 160 years. Both the developing and industrialized countries are overshooting the present budget estimates based on world per capita budget for the next forty years and proportional to the population of each country. It is important for the industrialized countries to bring down their emissions to meet their carbon budgets while the developing countries use their development space as a guideline for their development path. Furthermore, this paper presents aggressive and regressive scenarios for the industrialized countries to compensate for the climate debt they have created.http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2014.18.3.283Climate ChangeClimate DebtCarbon BudgetDeveloping CountriesCarbon Overshoot
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sudhakar Yedla
Sandhya Garg
spellingShingle Sudhakar Yedla
Sandhya Garg
Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
East Asian Economic Review
Climate Change
Climate Debt
Carbon Budget
Developing Countries
Carbon Overshoot
author_facet Sudhakar Yedla
Sandhya Garg
author_sort Sudhakar Yedla
title Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
title_short Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
title_full Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
title_fullStr Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Two Decades of International Climate Negotiations - Carbon Budget Allocation Approach to Re-shaping Developing Country Strategies
title_sort two decades of international climate negotiations - carbon budget allocation approach to re-shaping developing country strategies
publisher Korea Institute for International Economic Policy
series East Asian Economic Review
issn 2508-1640
2508-1667
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Climate negotiations have been going on for the last two decades and the awareness for impacts of climate change has improved substantially. However, the trends of global CO2 emissions did not reveal any encouraging signs, with developing countries emitting even more CO2 and industrialized nations showing no signs of reducing emissions to below their 1990 levels. In order to meet the ambitious targets set by the Stern report for the next two decades, it is important to find new and path-breaking approaches to climate change. This paper attempts to analyze the use of carbon/development space historically, at present and in the future with a focus on equity. Trends analysis focuses on the last two decades (Post Rio) and the carbon budget based analysis considers a period of 1850-2050. Industrialized countries are found to have significantly overshot their budgeted allocation for the last 160 years. Both the developing and industrialized countries are overshooting the present budget estimates based on world per capita budget for the next forty years and proportional to the population of each country. It is important for the industrialized countries to bring down their emissions to meet their carbon budgets while the developing countries use their development space as a guideline for their development path. Furthermore, this paper presents aggressive and regressive scenarios for the industrialized countries to compensate for the climate debt they have created.
topic Climate Change
Climate Debt
Carbon Budget
Developing Countries
Carbon Overshoot
url http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2014.18.3.283
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