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Papers by Karl Hallding
contributors: karl hallding, karina barquet and henrik carlsen (stockholm environment institute),... more contributors: karl hallding, karina barquet and henrik carlsen (stockholm environment institute), håvard hegre and nina von uexküll (uppsala university), and christie nicoson (ma candidate, uppsala university) introduction
China is watching: International politics is the key First official reference to Chinese domestic... more China is watching: International politics is the key First official reference to Chinese domestic mid-term targets Climate change advancing on the domestic agenda Successful and ambitious domestic climate policy gives confidence in the negotiations… … but current ambitions are still not ambitious enough for the 2°C target China's drivers and negotiation strategy China's relation to the G77 plays a crucial role Ready to make compromises-but within the confines of the UNFCCC The U.S. is working: Domestic politics is the constraint Waxman-Markey Senate climate bill now in play-the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Failure on health care reform would likely weaken Obama and Democratic leadership and worsen chances for success on climate Windows of opportunity Obama's trump card U.S.-China Partnership-Suicide pact or climate progress? Making virtue of necessity In our next policy brief...
Integrating sustainable development and security : an analytical approach with examples from the ... more Integrating sustainable development and security : an analytical approach with examples from the Middle East and North Africa, the Arctic and Central Asia
The climate challenge 1.1 Science says: a finite global budget for greenhouse gas emissions 1.2 C... more The climate challenge 1.1 Science says: a finite global budget for greenhouse gas emissions 1.2 China's sustainability challenge in the climate change context 1.3 This report 2 The need for a fair deal 2.1 Emissions, living standards, and consumption 2.2 Frameworks for burden sharing 2.3 What is China's fair share of global emissions reductions? 3 The art of the possible-a deep carbon reduction scenario 3.1 The deep carbon reduction scenario 3.2 Construction 3.3 Transport 3.4 Industry 3.5 Electricity generation 3.6 Managing the challenges and disruptive effects 4 Market mechanisms to price carbon 4.1 Phasing out subsidies 4.2 Carbon tax 4.3 Cap-and-trade system 4.4 China's choices for a carbon pricing mechanism 4.5 A global carbon market 4.6 China in a global carbon market 4.7 International harmonisation of carbon prices 4.8 International competitiveness and carbon tariff proposals 5 Innovation and investment 5.1 Technology and domestic innovation policy 5.2 A new plan to boost technology transfer 5.3 Investment and financing 6 A low-carbon China is a modern China References
Driving technological innovation for a low-carbon society : case studies for solar photovoltaics ... more Driving technological innovation for a low-carbon society : case studies for solar photovoltaics and carbon capture and storage
Planning for energy security In the early 2000s, it became obvious that the supercharged growth o... more Planning for energy security In the early 2000s, it became obvious that the supercharged growth of the Chinese economy had reached a level at which keeping up with energy demand would increasingly pose serious challenges. Realising that energy, climate change mitigation, and economic development are tightly interlinked, the Chinese government developed an ambitious set of energysecurity and climate-related policies as a cornerstone of the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010).
Climate change has reached the apex of the global agenda at a time when China faces significant d... more Climate change has reached the apex of the global agenda at a time when China faces significant development and energy security challenges. The political leadership and leading intellectuals are debating the direction of a new development pathway that provides both growth to meet development objectives, and dramatically reduces energy intensity and pollution. While the official position has not changed significantly, there are four key aspects that illustrate how climate change is conceived by the Chinese leadership. This signals that China may come to play a much more important role in global mitigation of climate change than was thought only a couple of years ago.
contributors: karl hallding, karina barquet and henrik carlsen (stockholm environment institute),... more contributors: karl hallding, karina barquet and henrik carlsen (stockholm environment institute), håvard hegre and nina von uexküll (uppsala university), and christie nicoson (ma candidate, uppsala university) introduction
China is watching: International politics is the key First official reference to Chinese domestic... more China is watching: International politics is the key First official reference to Chinese domestic mid-term targets Climate change advancing on the domestic agenda Successful and ambitious domestic climate policy gives confidence in the negotiations… … but current ambitions are still not ambitious enough for the 2°C target China's drivers and negotiation strategy China's relation to the G77 plays a crucial role Ready to make compromises-but within the confines of the UNFCCC The U.S. is working: Domestic politics is the constraint Waxman-Markey Senate climate bill now in play-the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Failure on health care reform would likely weaken Obama and Democratic leadership and worsen chances for success on climate Windows of opportunity Obama's trump card U.S.-China Partnership-Suicide pact or climate progress? Making virtue of necessity In our next policy brief...
Integrating sustainable development and security : an analytical approach with examples from the ... more Integrating sustainable development and security : an analytical approach with examples from the Middle East and North Africa, the Arctic and Central Asia
The climate challenge 1.1 Science says: a finite global budget for greenhouse gas emissions 1.2 C... more The climate challenge 1.1 Science says: a finite global budget for greenhouse gas emissions 1.2 China's sustainability challenge in the climate change context 1.3 This report 2 The need for a fair deal 2.1 Emissions, living standards, and consumption 2.2 Frameworks for burden sharing 2.3 What is China's fair share of global emissions reductions? 3 The art of the possible-a deep carbon reduction scenario 3.1 The deep carbon reduction scenario 3.2 Construction 3.3 Transport 3.4 Industry 3.5 Electricity generation 3.6 Managing the challenges and disruptive effects 4 Market mechanisms to price carbon 4.1 Phasing out subsidies 4.2 Carbon tax 4.3 Cap-and-trade system 4.4 China's choices for a carbon pricing mechanism 4.5 A global carbon market 4.6 China in a global carbon market 4.7 International harmonisation of carbon prices 4.8 International competitiveness and carbon tariff proposals 5 Innovation and investment 5.1 Technology and domestic innovation policy 5.2 A new plan to boost technology transfer 5.3 Investment and financing 6 A low-carbon China is a modern China References
Driving technological innovation for a low-carbon society : case studies for solar photovoltaics ... more Driving technological innovation for a low-carbon society : case studies for solar photovoltaics and carbon capture and storage
Planning for energy security In the early 2000s, it became obvious that the supercharged growth o... more Planning for energy security In the early 2000s, it became obvious that the supercharged growth of the Chinese economy had reached a level at which keeping up with energy demand would increasingly pose serious challenges. Realising that energy, climate change mitigation, and economic development are tightly interlinked, the Chinese government developed an ambitious set of energysecurity and climate-related policies as a cornerstone of the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010).
Climate change has reached the apex of the global agenda at a time when China faces significant d... more Climate change has reached the apex of the global agenda at a time when China faces significant development and energy security challenges. The political leadership and leading intellectuals are debating the direction of a new development pathway that provides both growth to meet development objectives, and dramatically reduces energy intensity and pollution. While the official position has not changed significantly, there are four key aspects that illustrate how climate change is conceived by the Chinese leadership. This signals that China may come to play a much more important role in global mitigation of climate change than was thought only a couple of years ago.