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Making Climate Action More Effective: Lessons Learned from the First Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)

Author: W. Pieter Pauw; Richard J.T. Klein |

11,700.00

Lessons Learned from the First Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)

Additional information

Weight 1 kg
Dimensions 47.5 × 37 × 1 cm
ISBN

9780367754082

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Ltd

Format

Hardback

Publishing Date

20-Jul-21

SKU: TMP_PUB_2249 Category: Tags: , , , Product ID: 25369

Description

Almost every country has formulated its Nationally Determined Contribution to the global response to climate change. These national climate action plans were key to the landmark adoption of the 2015 Paris Agreement. They will also be central to its implementation – even if, taken together, current plans are insufficient to meet the aims of the Paris Agreement. Every five years, countries update their NDCs to demonstrate increased ambition. But while essential, ambition alone is not enough. This book shows that to be able to realize their climate ambition, countries also need to enhance the effectiveness of their plans and policies. Enhancing effectiveness involves improving the transparency, coherence and implementability of their NDCs.

To ramp up ambition and effectiveness, future NDCs must build on and learn from experience. Based on a detailed analysis of the first round of NDCs by some of the world’s most knowledgeable climate policy experts, this book offers critical insights relevant to mitigation, adaptation and means of implementation. The book also discusses key elements of the Paris Agreement and broader climate policy, including the Enhanced Transparency Framework and the Paris Committee on Capacity Building, as well as considerations of equity and development. It is a must-read for researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and civil-society experts working on climate policy.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the Climate Policy.

 

Table of Contents

 

1. Beyond ambition: increasing the transparency, coherence and implementability of Nationally Determined Contributions

W. Pieter Pauw and Richard J.T. Klein

2. Ambition in the making: analysing the preparation and implementation process of the Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement

Frauke Röser, Oscar Widerberg, Niklas Höhne and Thomas Day

3. The 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement: voluntary contributions towards thematic policy coherence

Hannah Janetschek, Clara Brandi, Adis Dzebo and Bernd Hackmann

4. Exploring links between national climate strategies and non-state and subnational climate action in nationally determined contributions (NDCs)

Angel Hsu, John Brandt, Oscar Widerberg, Sander Chan and Amy Weinfurter

5. What are the implications of the Paris Agreement for inequality?

Caroline Zimm and Nebojsa Nakicenovic

6. Conditional nationally determined contributions in the Paris Agreement: foothold for equity or Achilles heel?

W. Pieter Pauw, Paula Castro, Jonathan Pickering and Shikha Bhasin

7. Nationally determined contributions (NDCs) as instruments for promoting national development agendas? An analysis of small island developing states (SIDS)

Aaron Atteridge, Cleo Verkuijl and Adis Dzebo

8. Capacity building for implementation of nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement

Mizan Khan, David Mfitumukiza and Saleemul Huq

9. Transparency requirements under the Paris Agreement and their (un)likely impact on strengthening the ambition of nationally determined contributions (NDCs)

Romain Weikmans, Harro van Asselt and J. Timmons Roberts