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Class 13 : Intro to Climate Regime

P. Brian Fisher CofC : POLS 405 Spring 2011. Class 13 : Intro to Climate Regime. “Our Common Future”.

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Class 13 : Intro to Climate Regime

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  1. P. Brian Fisher CofC: POLS405 Spring 2011 Class13: Intro to Climate Regime

  2. “Our Common Future” • “The environment is where we live; and development is what we all do in attempting to improve our lot in that abode. The two are inseparable….Many of the development paths of the industrialized nations are clearly unsustainable. And the development decisions of these countries, because of their great economic and political power, will have a profound effect on the ability of all peoples to sustain human progress for generations.” • Brundlant Commission, 1987

  3. Part I Context for Global Environmental problems

  4. United Nations • Successor to the League of Nations after WWII • Complex and binding array of international organizations • Promote a variety of shared objectives: peace & security, health & education, development, trade, human rts, and environmental protection. • UNEP: UN Environmental Program (1972): assists developing countries to implement environmentally-sound policies and encourage sustainable development. • GEF: Global Environment Facility (1991): designed to help developing countries to finance global environ projects and funded by richer donor countries

  5. ‘sovereignty’ Sovereignty: right to govern own territory or geographic or cultural boundaries (i.e. usually the ‘nation-state’) In the international legal order, states are: • Sovereign and equal (rights and duties) • Prima facie, therefore, each state has exclusive jurisdiction over its own territory and natural resources within it. • States then have a duty of non intervention

  6. State Sovereignty (problem or solution?) • Sovereignty: the right of the state government to exercise discretionary power over its territory • Treaty of Westphalia (1648) • Principle Rt of self-determination w/in territory • Principle Equality b/w states • Nonintervention • Resulted in “power balancing” • Provides the basis for int’l politics and international law (both enshrine this norm)

  7. ‘Tragedy of the Commons’ • Def’n: areas beyond the sovereignty of any nation which produces a conflict b/w individual and the common good over resources and protecting spaces. • Problem of ‘collective action’: Rational self-interested individuals or Nations will not act to achieve their common or group interests. Thus, those with more resources will carry the load, while others forced or by choice ‘freeride’. • EXs/ Oceans, subsoil, atmosphere, outer space, Antarctic • ‘Tragedy’: It’s rational to use, which leads to exploitation, of these areas without reciprocation or regeneration • Positive : the herder receives all of the proceeds from each additional animal • Negative : the pasture is slightly degraded by each add’l animal

  8. 3 Elementary Changes in System 1. Complexity: Industrialization (enhanced by globalization), environmental problems have grown in scale & intensity and therefore complexity—local problems became global(McNeil, 4) -humans prioritize economic values and conceptions of ‘progress’ (entertained from ‘Enlightenment’) are commonly accepted as agents for fundamentally altering Earth’s biosystems. 2. Global North/South: the political system has transformed from the dissolution of colonial empires to a tripling of the number of independent states since WW II, which remains bound legal sovereignty, and of which the planet is generally split into two economic factions: North and South. 3. GCS: the nascent emergence of global civil society offers a new ‘voice’ for burgeoning global community and its interests. * civil society is the sphere of social, economic and cultural life that takes place above the individual but below the state.

  9. Addressing the Problem Global in Scale • In contrast to norm of sovereignty and fragmented political system, is the interconnected biophysical system (e.g. climate, oceans, ozone). GCC problem emerges out of a fractured global political system’s attempt to regulate an interconnected biophysical environment. • “We live in world fragmented by political divisions of sovereign states,” but “reassembled by pervasive flows of people, goods, money, ideas, images, and technology across borders.”

  10. Emergence of Global Governance • Governance is the many ways individuals and institutions, public and private, manage their common affairs…it includes formal institutions and regimes empowered to enforce compliance, as well as informal arrangements that people and institutions either have agreed to or perceive to be in their interest. • Global Governance: primarily governmental relationships, but now includes NGOs, citizens’ movements, MNCs, and the global capital mkt. Interacting with these are global mass media (controlled by whom?) • Regime: set of rules, cultural or social norms, etc. that regulate a specific operation within a vertical sphere (e.g. climate, human rights, nonproliferation) and its interactions with society at multiple levels.

  11. Legal Regimes for the Environment • Regimes for addressing global-scale environmental problems have had largely been based in law (international law) • This includes IEL, soft law, and nonbinding int’l policy declarations

  12. Part II History of IEL/Global Environmental Governance

  13. Historical Continuum of IEL • 1972, Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment (differences b/w GS and GN) • 1982, UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) (1994)—strongest environ agreement • 1992, Earth Summit, UN Conference on Environment and Development World (based on Brundtland Commission or WCED, 1983), Rio • Created paradigm upon which IEL has since been based: SD • 2002, Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), Jo’burg

  14. 1972, Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment Serves as Foundation for IEL b/c: • Biosphere and planet were identified as objects necessitating protection (1st time) • Widely attended (114 or 131 UN states) • Creation of the UNEP—the 1st int’l organization with an exclusively environmental mandate • Stockholm Declaration, outlining duties and responsibilities of citizens/states

  15. Stockholm Declaration, 1972 Core of Declaration is based on assumptions: • “(1) man has acquired the power to transform his environment in countless ways and on an unprecedented scale… • (3) We see around us growing evidence of man-made harm in many regions of the earth… • (4) In the developing countries most of the environmental problems are caused by under-development …In the industrialized countries, environmental problems are generally related to industrialization and technological development… • (7) Local and national governments will bear the greatest burden for large-scale environmental policy and action within their jurisdictions.”

  16. Central Environ Issues from Stockholm • Is global pollution problem of poverty or affluence? • Can development or ‘growth’ operate as complement to environmental protection? • Whose responsible, and who should shoulder this responsibility via North/South? • Does national “sovereignty” help or hinder global efforts on environmental issues?

  17. World Charter for Nature, 1982 • Goal: set forth “principles of conservation by which all human conduct affecting nature is to be guided and judged”—symbolic expression • Non-binding, differs from Stockholm in substance and form—an ecological instrument • Biocentric—protection of nature as end itself • Strongly supported by GS (developing countries) which differs from Stockholm • Many treaties thereafter incorporated itsethical components

  18. UNCED, Rio 1992 (Earth Summit) Four Institutional Results • Rio Declaration • Agenda 21 (Non-binding Action Plan) • Nonbinding Stmt of Principles for Global Consensus on Management, Conservation and SD of Forests • Ceremonial signing of UNFCCC and CBD Conventions

  19. Rio Declaration • Replaced the “Earth Charter” • “Set a dubious foundation for IEL (reversing many ideas in Stockholm)” • Some scholars even suggested Rio undermined the autonomy of IEL and its future application • Built on compromises between EP (environ protection) and economic development • More specific than Stockholm, but controversial

  20. Key Principles of Rio • Principle 1: Reflects an anthropocentric approach to environment– “human beings are at the center of concerns for SD”—no rt to clean environ • Principle 2: Nascent rt to wholesome environment replaced by rt to development • Duty not to cause TB harm (Principle 21) was weakened by Principle 2 allowing states to “exploit their own natural resources pursuant to their environ and develop policies” (CBD follows 21) • Principle 3&4: Reformulation of obligation to conserve (for future generations) changed to right to consume and develop (3) GS; while 4 states that EP shall constitute an integral part of the development process “not isolated from it” (GN) • Principle 13: “States shall develop national law regarding liability and compensation for victims of pollution and other environ damage” (Nat’l juris; indivrts)

  21. Effects of Rio • Balances EP v. Development, or does rt to development weakens environmental concerns? • First compromise between GN and GS • But does it diminish the imperative of SD • Enshrines distinct principles of IEL • Helps to move IEL from normative features to techniques of implementation

  22. ‘Earth Charter’, 2000 • Idea generated from the Brundtland Report, 1987, and bounced around until reformed from 1997-2000. Still not adopted by UN. • Includes principles of: respect for earth and its diversity, democracy and full participation, future generations, preventative harm, precautionary principle, human rights, eradicate poverty, equitable development, education, justice, and nonviolence. • Resistance from religious right in US as being secular guide to planetary relations.

  23. WSSD (World Summit on Sustainable Development), 2002, Jo’burg Goals • Halve by 2015, people w/o basic sanitation • By 2020, minimize chemical effects • Restock fisheries by 2015 • By 2010, significant reduction in biodiversity loss (which requires financial and technical resources to GS)

  24. WSSD Focal Points • Clean water and sanitation • Access to energy services to 2 billion • Reversing agriculture from desertification • Protect BD and restock fisheries • Protecting human health from chemic toxins

  25. WSSD Problems • Plan of Implementation silent on follow-up mechanisms • No fresh contributions • Fading recognition of Precautionary Principle (strongly estab at Rio) • Almost made environ treaties subservient to WTO rules • Growing doubt (GS) that treaty system works (lacks accountability and credibility)

  26. WSSD Outcomes • Increasing role for NGOs and nonstate actors • Increasing partnerships among diversified groups • Specific targets guided by specific goals • Galvanized like-minded countries on climate change and BD loss • Ironically, more willing to discuss economic/social pillars of SD than environ

  27. Outcomes from WSSD • Global N v. S—have arrived at a sense of understanding that environment and development are connected • Environmentalism v. Environment--where environmentalism may not be enough to combat environ harm, b/c • 9/11 • US has disengaged on environ issues • Environ agrs trumped by trade agrs • Little support for environ orgs and instits • Future • SD: great vision, untenable policy? • Too much on environmentalism’s plate? • Most effective when aligned with main engines of environ degradation: unmindful affluence, pop growth, inappropriate technology, and ideological worldview

  28. The Future? Earth Summit 2012 • Rio + 20 or Earth Summit 2012: Rio • Objectives of the Summit are: • to secure renewed political commitment to sustainable development; • To assess progress toward internationally agreed goals on SD; • Address new & emerging challenges • 2specific themes: • A green economy in the context of poverty eradication & SD • An institutional framework for SD

  29. Part III Current Governance of Climate

  30. UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on CC Int’l environmental treaty produced at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) or Earth Summit, held in Rio de Janeiro June 1992 Designed to stabilize GHG emissions

  31. UNFCCC, Article 2 “The ultimate objective of this Convention and any related legal instruments that the Conference of the Parties may adopt is to achieve, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Convention, stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Such a level should be achieved within a time-frame sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally to climate change, to ensure that food production is not threatened and to enable economic development to proceed in a sustainable manner.”

  32. Kyoto Protocol (entered into force Feb 15, 2005) • Cap and Trade System: cap overall emissions through market incentives • Developed Countries (Annex 1 & 2) to reduce GHG emissions to ~5% below 1990 levels, between 2008 and 2012. • Each country has own emissions target (EU 8%; US 7%; Jap 6%; Russia 0%; Norway +1%; Australia +8%) • Expires in 2012 (Copenhagen is COP 15, setting the table for new agr) • See http://en.cop15.dk/ • ‘Flexibility Mechanisms’ of KP (ways to reach emissions targets) • Joint implementation (JI) (within developed countries) • States can work together to meet objectives • Problem: not changing behavior at home • Clean Development Mechanisms (CDM) between developed and developing • E.g. using rainforest as sink in developing country (no development in RF for economic benefit) • Emissions Trading (ET)

  33. Copenhagen Accord • Non binding agreement signed between major GHG emitters in Dec 2009 in Copenhagen • UN has renounced the document (based on pressure from the developing countries) • Goal: recognizes "the scientific view that the increase in global temperature should be below 2°C", in a context of sustainable development, to combat climate change. • Mitigation: developed countries (Annex I Parties) would "commit to economy-wide emissions targets for 2020" to be submitted by 31 January 2010 and agrees that these Parties to the Kyoto Protocol would strengthen their existing targets. • Adaptation: Agrees a "goal" for the world to raise $100 billion per year by 2020, from "a wide variety of sources", to help developing countries cut carbon emissions (mitigation).

  34. Climate Policy at ALL scales • New US election cycle  not much mvmt on climate and Obama has removed the climate bill • Cap and Trade: Place caps on national GHG emissions and actors/industry/corps have to buy permits to produce certain amt of GHGs. If they go over they have to trade with actors under their allotment. • Global and domestic approaches • Public Op has receded on whether climate change is human induced, AND to take significant action (in last 2 years) • Enforcing Global Agreements (UNFCCC & Kyoto)  Cancun deadend? • States/cities taking lead • CC commissions • Action Plans • Performance stnds on electricity and vehicles • GHG reporting and auditing • Legal/Policy Action: • EPA v. Mass (2007)—GHG are a “pollutant” to be regulated by the EPA • State (e.g. California) new rules/laws governing clean energy, fuel stnds, etc that affect climate

  35. Massachusetts v. US EPA (2007) • In 2003 (Bush), the EPA made two determinations: • 1. the EPA lacked authority under the Clean Air Act to regulate carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases (GHGs) • 2. even if the EPA did have such authority, it would not use it. • Petitioners were States: MA, CA, NY, etc, cities: Balt, DC, & NYC, and Enviro Groups; Respondents were EPA, States: TX, OH, AS, etc. and Auto/Truck Groups • Holding: • Petitioners had standing: Only 1 plaintiff needs to meet standing, MA did b/c of future SLR • the CAA does give the US EPA authority to regulate tailpipe emissions of GHGs, and • its current rationale for not regulating was found to be inadequate, and the agency must articulate a reasonable basis in order to avoid regulation. Sup Ct determined that to NOT regulate GHGs would be “arbitrary, capricious and not in accordance with the law” • In addition, the majority report commented that "greenhouse gases fit well within the Clean Air Act’s capacious definition of air pollutant.” • Dissent (Scalia): No standing, but regardless, EPA should not be made to regulate, they have the right to “defer” and should be based on “Chevron Deference”

  36. Vids • UCLA LAW: Mass v. EPA (5m) • EPA Response (Stephen Johnson) in Congress Hearing (8m)

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