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[en] The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) potentially offers a major opportunity for catalysing technology leapfrogging in the South. A CDM which delivers genuine incentives for investment in clean energy technologies and innovative energy solutions could become the first step in shifting towards a development model based on the delivery of sustainable energy services. Conversely, according to a recent analysis for WWF, a CDM regime which allows easy credits for conventional technologies will merely serve to reinforce the current trend towards increased carbon dependency in the South, at the same time as it allows industrialised countries to continue to increase greenhouse gas emissions at home
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.54); p. 21-24

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[en] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an international body of the WMO (World Meteorological Organization) and UNEP (United Nations Environmental Programme) that publishes authoritative reports on the scientific, technical and socio-economic aspects of climate change and climate policy. The knowledge contained in the IPCC reports forms the basis for the development of global climate policy by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The three volumes of the Third Assessment Report will be published early in 2001, shortly after Cop6 (Sixth Convention of Parties, The Hague, Netherlands, November 2000). This broadly supported summary of scientific insights will be important for the further substantiation of climate policy
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.54); p. 2-4

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[en] The current international climate negotiations (including CoP-6,recently held in The Hague, Netherlands) are mainly concerned with short term actions and barriers, and are experiencing considerable difficulties, as was once again revealed in The Hague. But we should not forget that keeping climate risks under control also demands a long term perspective. Such a perspective demands an estimate of both possible consequences and risks of climate change, and the possible solutions, in terms of strategies, policy measures, consequences and costs. 2 refs
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.55); p. 7-9

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[en] Since the 1990s there has been a renewal of interest in the possibility of sustainable generating energy from biomass, an interest driven in part by the climate issue. Other motives are the search for alternatives for parts of Western agriculture and progress in the technological feasibility of efficiently producing high-quality energy from biomass. World-wide this renewed interest has led to a clear increase in research, demonstration and commercial implementation of biomass energy systems. A recent thesis concludes that biomass can contribute to all aspects of sustainability. In the context of sustainable development (often viewed as a concept having economic, social and ecological dimensions), the central question asked by this Ph.D. research is: How do biomass electricity systems compare to fossil-fuel systems and to the land-use that they may replace, in terms of costs, macro-economic and environmental impacts. This article presents a number of conclusions
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.57); p. 9-11

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[en] In recent decades it has become increasingly clear that the global climate is warming and that regional climates are changing. The changes include alterations in rainfall pattern and intensities, sea level, and the frequencies of extreme weather events. Climate changes will not just have global effects, they will also occur regionally. The consequences will be felt and dealt with in our own region. In addition to studies at the European level, a study entitled 'An integrated assessment of vulnerability to climate change and adaptation options in the Netherlands' was carried out
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.62); p. 11-14

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[en] Besides the standard, classical type of emission trading, in which emitters are allocated a fixed emission platform, a new variant has recently been discussed: emission trading with relative ceilings. The permitted emissions in this type of trading is determined by a performance standard defined in terms of quantity emitted per unit of product (or per unit of input) multiplied by that quantity produced. This article shows why this type of emission trading is popular with the business community and in government circles, but also why it is less efficient than the classical type of trading emissions with fixed ceilings
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.63); p. 5-7

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[en] The legal framework of the Kyoto Protocol was established during the 7th Climate Conference in Marrakech (November 2001), which opened the road to ratification and implementation. There was a single, major exception, however. the United States indicated they would not ratify the treaty since, in their view, it was fundamentally flawed. President Bush recently proposed a different approach that he saw as a better alternative to Kyoto. What is clear in any case is that both the US withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol and the alternative approach have major consequences for international climate policy. What is the significance of the Kyoto Protocol now? And what influence has America's withdrawal had? What do President Bush's proposals entail and what are the most important differences from the Kyoto Protocol? What are the implications for international climate policy?
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.63); p. 1-4

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[en] According to the author the climate problem is not integrated in the liberalization and restructuring of the European energy market. It is argued that the energy market is in fact eminently suitable for the internationalization of environmental costs and to counter the climate problem
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.53); p. 10-13

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[en] Private companies will play a critical role in implementation of successful climate policies. However, until now little is known about triggers to develop corporate climate strategies. In a USA-Europe co-operation, researchers have investigated emerging climate strategies in the oil, automobile, chemical and bank and insurance industries. A focal question was whether strategies of EU based corporations differ systematically from USA based corporations. Results show rather sectorial specific developments. In most sectors, i.e. oil, automobile and banks, European corporations generally tend to have more advanced climate policies than their USA counterparts, but this does not apply to chemical companies. In the automobile industry, USA and Europe show convergent strategies. In the other sectors, convergence is not clearly visible
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Change (Leidschendam); ISSN 0925-5478;
; (no.54); p. 18-21

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[en] In an interview Dr. Cor Schuurmans, chairman of the Dutch Climate Committee which advises the Minister of the Environment and leader of the Dutch delegation to the April 1993 International Negotiating Committee for the Framework Convention answered questions relating to climate change. These included his views on the effects of climate change on our daily lives, the role of the many international organizations involved in climate research, his opinions on the recent Royal Netherlands Meteorological Office (KNMI) report on climate, the reasons for scientific research into climate and the role of the National Research Programme on Climate Change in the Netherlands
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