Climate Change Policy after Kyoto: Blueprint for a Realistic Approach
By (Author) Warwick J. McKibbin
By (author) Peter J. Wilcoxen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Brookings Institution
16th December 2002
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
363.7387
Paperback
133
Width 153mm, Height 228mm, Spine 10mm
222g
The Kyoto Protocol represents nearly a decade of interational effort to reduce carbon emissions, but it has not been ratified by any major greenhouse emitter and it has been rejected by the US. This text argues that the contemporary approach of international negotiations on the Kyoto Protocol is going in the wrong direction, and it offers what the authors believe is a blueprint for more effective policy. They believe that managing uncertainty - particularly the future costs of any plan - is key to realistic climate policy. They maintain that sustainable policy should meet four basic criteria: it should slow down carbon dioxide emissions where it is cost-effective to do so; compensate those who are hurt economically; require a high degree of consensus both domestically and internationally; and allow countries to enter the programme easily and continue to participate even if they drop out of the agreement at certain times. The book summarizes the contemporary state of knowledge about climate change and discusses the history of negotiations since 1992 - in the process identifying the Kyoto Protocol as the wrong approach to the problem.
"Excellent for students who are being introduced to global warming and the vicissitudes of getting an effective international response.... This book is a policy brief meant to inform negotiators and policy makers about some basic ideas without getting bogged down in lots of details.... The book is an excellent policy brief of their plan, good for policy makers and also good for economists (expecially graduate students) who would like to consider the plan and try to work out some of its implications and ramifications." Barry C. Field, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 8/1/2004
"Warwick J. McKibbin is a professor of international economics and head of the Economics Division at the Australian National University's Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies. He also is a nonresident senior fellow in the Economic Studies program at the Brookings Institution and a member of the board of the Reserve Bank of Australia. Peter J. Wilcoxen is an associate professor in the department of economics at the University of Texas, Austin, and a nonresident senior fellow in the Economic Studies program at the Brookings Institution."