Publications

Author(s): Kartha, S.; Baer, P.; Athanasiou, T.; Kemp-Benedict, E.
Year: 2009
In: Kartha, S., P. Baer, T. Athanasiou, E. Kemp-Benedict (2009). The Greenhouse Development Rights framework. Climate and Development, 1 (2): 147-165.
Type: Journal article
Language:
Centre:
US
Link to SEI author(s):
The Greenhouse Development Rights framework
Developing countries have thus firmly asserted that a solution to climate change cannot come at the expense of their development.
The Greenhouse Development Rights (GDR) framework is a climate regime architecture explicitly structured to safeguard a right to development, and thus make an ambitious global solution possible.
It is a burden-sharing framework that defines national obligations, based on responsibility for the climate change problem and capacity to solve it. Both are defined with respect to a “development threshold” that serves to relieve from the costs and constraints of the climate crisis those individuals still striving for a decent standard of welfare.
Highlighting the United States and China, we discuss implications in the context of an international funding mechanism and a global cap and trade system.
The GDR approach is relevant to a next phase of the global climate regime negotiated in Copenhagen as a framework for principle-based commitments for industrialized countries, and a basis for future evolution toward a globally differentiated system.
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