Common ground for effort sharing? Preferred principles for distributing climate mitigation efforts
Abstract
This paper fills a gap in the current academic and policy literature concerning how
parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change find
common ground when distributing commitments and responsibilities to curb climate
change. Preferred principles for sharing the effort to mitigate greenhouse gas
emissions are compared among 170 delegates and more than 300 observers attending
the UN Climate Conference in Copenhagen in December 2009. Respondents were
asked to indicate their degree of support for eight effort-sharing principles for
mitigation action. The survey results are analysed according to geographical region
and party coalition affiliation. The results indicate that voluntary contribution,
indicated as willingness to contribute, was the least preferred principle among both
negotiators and observers. This could be seen as ironic, given that voluntary
contribution is the guiding principle of the Copenhagen Accord. Across regions and
party coalitions, agreement was strongest for basing a country’s mitigation level on
its capacity to pay in terms of GDP per capita and on its historic greenhouse gas
emissions since 1990.
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Date
2011-03Author
Hjerpe, Mattias
Löfgren, Åsa
Linnér, Björn-Ola
Hennlock, Magnus
Sterner, Thomas
Jagers, Sverker C.
Keywords
burden sharing
equity
climate change mitigation
Copenhagen
negotiating capacity/process
post-2012 negotiations
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
491
Language
eng