153 results on '"Mersmann, Florian"'
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2. 4. Kommunale Wirtschaft im regionalen Vergleich
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Mersmann, Florian, primary, Kreutzer, Michael, additional, and Richter, Peter, additional
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- 2007
- Full Text
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3. Global climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
- Abstract
The twenty-third Conference of the Parties (COP-23) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was held in Bonn on 6-17 November 2017, under the presidency of Fiji. COP-23 focused, in particular, on developing rules to implement the 2015 Paris Agreement and on raising ambition for climate protection. Since this was the first "Oceanic" COP, special attention was given to supporting the countries of the Global South in their efforts to reduce emissions, adapt to climate change, and deal with the unavoidable impacts of climate change. This article summarizes the main developments and results of COP-23.
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- 2019
4. Implementation of nationally determined contributions : Ethiopia country report
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Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Mersmann, Florian, Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, and Mersmann, Florian
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The study analyses the country background, emissions trends, ongoing activities and barriers relating to the implementation of the Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) of Ethiopia under the UNFCCC. A special emphasis is laid on further mitigation potentials in the fields of agriculture, forestry and low-emission transport.
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- 2019
5. Phasing out coal in the German energy sector : interdependencies, challenges and potential solutions
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Pao-Yu, Oei, Brauers, Hanna, Herpich, Philipp, Hirschhausen, Christian von, Prahl, Andreas, Wehnert, Timon, Bierwirth, Anja, Fischedick, Manfred, Kurwan, Jenny, Mersmann, Florian, Peters, Anna, Samadi, Sascha, Umpfenbach, Katharina, Lechtenböhmer, Stefan, Nebel, Arjuna, Wagner, Oliver, Lorenz, Casimir, Teichmann, Isabel, Kemfert, Claudia, Pao-Yu, Oei, Brauers, Hanna, Herpich, Philipp, Hirschhausen, Christian von, Prahl, Andreas, Wehnert, Timon, Bierwirth, Anja, Fischedick, Manfred, Kurwan, Jenny, Mersmann, Florian, Peters, Anna, Samadi, Sascha, Umpfenbach, Katharina, Lechtenböhmer, Stefan, Nebel, Arjuna, Wagner, Oliver, Lorenz, Casimir, Teichmann, Isabel, and Kemfert, Claudia
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Relevant aspects of the options and requirements for reducing and phasing out coal-fired power generation have been under debate for several years. This process has produced a range of strategies, analyses and arguments, outlining how coal use in the energy sector could be reduced and phased out in the planned time frame, and determining structural policy measures suitable to support this. This Coal Report studies the existing analyses and provides an overview of the state of debate. It is intended to provide information on facts and contexts, present the advantages and disadvantages of individual courses of action, and reveal the respective scientific backgrounds. It strives to take a scientific and independent approach, and present facts in concise language, making it easy to follow for readers who are not experts in the field, without excessive abridgements or provocative statements.
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- 2019
6. Die Beendigung der energetischen Nutzung von Kohle in Deutschland : ein Überblick über Zusammenhänge, Herausforderungen und Lösungsoptionen
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Pao-Yu, Oei, Brauers, Hanna, Herpich, Philipp, Hirschhausen, Christian von, Prahl, Andreas, Wehnert, Timon, Bierwirth, Anja, Fischedick, Manfred, Kurwan, Jenny, Mersmann, Florian, Peters, Anna, Samadi, Sascha, Umpfenbach, Katharina, Lechtenböhmer, Stefan, Nebel, Arjuna, Wagner, Oliver, Lorenz, Casimir, Teichmann, Isabel, Kemfert, Claudia, Pao-Yu, Oei, Brauers, Hanna, Herpich, Philipp, Hirschhausen, Christian von, Prahl, Andreas, Wehnert, Timon, Bierwirth, Anja, Fischedick, Manfred, Kurwan, Jenny, Mersmann, Florian, Peters, Anna, Samadi, Sascha, Umpfenbach, Katharina, Lechtenböhmer, Stefan, Nebel, Arjuna, Wagner, Oliver, Lorenz, Casimir, Teichmann, Isabel, and Kemfert, Claudia
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Relevante Fragen rund um die Möglichkeiten und Erfordernisse der Reduzierung und Beendigung der Kohleverstromung werden seit mehreren Jahren diskutiert. Dabei sind eine Fülle von Strategien, Analysen und Argumenten entwickelt worden, wie die Reduzierung und Beendigung der energetischen Nutzung von Kohle auf der Zeitachse umgesetzt und strukturpolitisch flankiert werden könnte. Der vorliegende "Kohle-Reader" greift die vorliegenden Analysen auf und gibt einen Überblick über den Diskussionsstand. Er soll über Fakten und Zusammenhänge informieren, das Für und Wider für einzelne Handlungsoptionen benennen und dazu den jeweiligen wissenschaftlichen Hintergrund aufzeigen. Er hat den Anspruch wissenschaftlich-neutral zu sein und er soll in Sprache und Darstellung prägnant und für die nicht zuvor im Detail mit den Themen befassten Leserinnen und Leser gut verständlich sein, ohne unzulässig zu verkürzen oder zuzuspitzen.
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- 2019
7. Implementation of nationally determined contributions : Rebublic of Marshall Islands country report
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Mersmann, Florian, Fekete, Hanna, Luna, Lisa, Wade, Herbert, Mersmann, Florian, Fekete, Hanna, Luna, Lisa, and Wade, Herbert
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The study analyses the country background, emissions trends, ongoing activities and barriers relating to the implementation of the Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) of the Republic of Marshall Islands under the UNFCCC. A special emphasis is laid on further mitigation potentials in the fields of transport - especially low-carbon domestic shipping - and waste reduction, disposal and processing.
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- 2019
8. Evaluating the adequacy of the outcome of COP21 in the context of the development of the broader international climate regime complex : deliverable 4.2 ; COP21 - results and implications for pathways and policies for low emissions European societies
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Rayner, Tim, Shawoo, Zoha, Hermwille, Lukas, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Mersmann, Florian, Asche, Friederike, Rudolph, Frederic, Lah, Oliver, Kodukala, Santhosh, Oberthür, Sebastian, Khandekar, Gauri, Wyns, Tomas, Kretschmer, Bianka, Jones, Damon, Melkie, Mahlet, Zamarioli, Luis, Rayner, Tim, Shawoo, Zoha, Hermwille, Lukas, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Mersmann, Florian, Asche, Friederike, Rudolph, Frederic, Lah, Oliver, Kodukala, Santhosh, Oberthür, Sebastian, Khandekar, Gauri, Wyns, Tomas, Kretschmer, Bianka, Jones, Damon, Melkie, Mahlet, and Zamarioli, Luis
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Much mitigation-related governance activity is evident in a range of sectoral systems, and regarding particular governance functions. However, there is a tendency for this activity to relate to the easiest functions to address, such as "learning and knowledge building", or to take place in somewhat limited "niches". Across all sectoral systems examined, the gap between identified governance needs and what is currently supplied is most serious in terms of the critical function of setting rules to facilitate collective action. A lack of "guidance and signal" is also evident, particularly in the finance, extractive industries, energy-intensive industries, and buildings sectoral systems. Of the sectoral systems examined, the power sector appears the most advanced in covering the main international governance functions required of it. Nevertheless, it still falls short in achieving critical governance functions necessary for sufficient decarbonisation. Significantly, while the signal is strong and clear for the phase-in of renewable energy, it is either vague or absent when it comes to the phase-out of fossil fuel-generated electricity. The same lack of signal that certain high-carbon activities need actively to be phased out is also evident in financial, fossil-fuel extractive industry and transport-related sectors. More effective mitigation action will need greater co-ordination or orchestration effort, sometimes led by the UNFCCC, but also from the bodies such as the G20, as well as existing (or potentially new) sector-level institutions. The EU needs to re-consider what it means to provide climate leadership in an increasingly "polycentric" governance landscape.
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- 2019
9. Key concepts, core challenges and governance functions of international climate governance : deliverable 4.1 ; COP21 - results and implications for pathways and policies for low emissions European societies
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Oberthür, Sebastian, Hermwille, Lukas, Khandekar, Gauri, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Rayner, Tim, Wyns, Tomas, Mersmann, Florian, Jones, Damon, Kretschmer, Bianca, Melkie, Mahlet, Oberthür, Sebastian, Hermwille, Lukas, Khandekar, Gauri, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Rayner, Tim, Wyns, Tomas, Mersmann, Florian, Jones, Damon, Kretschmer, Bianca, and Melkie, Mahlet
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Combating climate change requires a fundamental simultaneous transformation of various sectoral systems that are key to the functioning of our economies and societies, such as energy, industry, transport, housing, and agriculture. This report by the COP21 RIPPLES project examines sector-specific challenges to decarbonisation and what contribution international governance could make to overcoming these challenges. Taking a sectoral perspective, the report identifies the key governance challenges that exist internationally towards the deep transformations required, and specifies the resulting key governance functions to be fulfilled by means of international cooperation/international institutions. To this end, the report first clarifies a number of key concepts, including international (climate) governance, international and transnational institutions, institutional complexes and poly-centricity. It then derives a number of functions that international institutions can fulfil from the relevant literature: providing guidance and signals, setting rules, providing transparency and accountability, providing capacity building, technology and finance, and facilitating knowledge and learning. This is the basis for an investigation into the key governance challenges and the potential of international governance in 14 key sectoral systems.
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- 2019
10. Evaluating the Adequacy of the Outcome of COP21 in the Context of the Development of the Broader International Climate Regime Complex
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Rayner, Tim, Oberthür, Sebastian, Hermwille, Lukas, Khandekar, Gauri, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Kretschmer, Bianka, Wyns, Tomas, Mersmann, Florian, Jones, Damon, Melkie, Mahlet, Shawoo, Zoha, Lah, Oliver, Asche, Friederike, Rudolph, Frederic, Kodukala, Santhosh, and Zamarioli, Luis
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- 2018
11. The calm before the storm:An assessment of the 23rd Climate Change Conference (COP 23) in Bonn
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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SDG 13 - Climate Action - Published
- 2018
12. Transformational Change Guidance. Guidance for assessing the transformational impacts of policies and actions
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Olsen, Karen Holm, Singh, Neelam, Rich, David, Mersmann, Florian, Neba, George Akwah, Ogahara, Jiro, Uhlemann, Kathrin, Levin, Kelly, Vieweg, Marion, Carman, Rebecca, Lee, So-Young, Lütken, Søren, Bujhawan, Tamara, and Hansen, Ulrich Elmer
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ICAT Transformational Change Guidance, May 2018
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- 2018
13. The calm before the storm : an assessment of the 23rd Climate Change Conference (COP 23) in Bonn
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, and Environmental Policy Analysis
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ddc:320 ,SDG 13 - Climate Action - Abstract
From 6 to 17 November, the 23rd Conference of the Parties (COP23) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was held in Bonn under the presidency of Fiji. Researchers of the Wuppertal Institute, who attended the conference, have now published an in-depth analysis of the key results of the conference. The report starts by discussing developments regarding the implementation of the Paris Agreement, in particular the negotiations on the detailed "rulebook" for implementing the Agreement. Other key issues addressed at the conference were the support for countries of the Global South in dealing with the effects of climate change (adaptation and climate finance) and preparation of the first global review of climate action that will take place in December this year. In addition, the report discusses recent developments in the wider world that have an impact on the UNFCCC, in particular the rise of pioneer alliances at the intergovernmental and civil society level. Although some progress was achieved regarding the rulebook for implementation of the Paris Agreement, no real breakthrough was made. Therefore, quite some diplomatic work and political leadership will be needed this year to make the adoption of the rulebook at COP24 in Katowice (Poland) possible. This will require quite some tailwind from civil society and the media.
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- 2018
14. Phasing-out coal, reinventing European regions : an analysis of EU structural funding in four European coal regions ; final report
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Wehnert, Timon, Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, Bierwirth, Anja, Buschka, Michael, Wehnert, Timon, Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, Bierwirth, Anja, and Buschka, Michael
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European coal mining regions face massive transformational challenges. The necessity of climate protection only intensifies a trend, prevalent in all of Europe: coal mining has been losing its economic importance over the last decades. Fewer and fewer people are employed in the sector. Coal regions face the challenge of how to facilitate a just transition, and which perspectives to develop for a future beyond coal. Against this background this study analyses the current situation in four key European coal mining regions, namely: Aragon in Spain, Lusatia in Germany, Silesia in Poland and Western Macedonia in Greece. The study provides a brief summary of the regions' socio-economic structure, including the respective role of coal mining. An assessment of how existing European structural instruments, specifically the European Structural and Investment Funds (the ESI Funds) are utilised in the region, forms the core of the study.
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- 2018
15. The implications of how climate funds conceptualize transformational change in developing countries
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Boodoo, Zyaad, Mersmann, Florian, Olsen, Karen Holm, Boodoo, Zyaad, Mersmann, Florian, and Olsen, Karen Holm
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The search for globally coordinated mitigation strategies that could contribute effectively towards bridging the gap between current emissions reduction efforts and a rapidly closing 2°C climate target remains contentious. The participation of developing countries through Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) is emerging as a crucial feature to attain this goal. Against this background, two of the major NAMA funding agencies have embraced "transformational change (TC)" and "paradigm shifts" as policy concepts. Yet, their operationalization within aid management approaches has not been fully justified. Concurrently, academic interest in theories of sustainability transitions has been growing, out of which the Transition Management (TM) approach provides the theoretical inspiration to study, and eventually promote, systemic TCs. However, there is still limited knowledge with which to contextualize the steering of such transitions to different settings. This article engages in these debates by reviewing the theoretical grounding behind the Green Climate Fund and the NAMA Facility's conceptualizations of TC through NAMA interventions against the corresponding theoretical assumptions of TM. Based on a critical review of relevant literature, it is argued that the logical framework-based approach adopted by the funds contains implicit assumptions of causality, which do not adequately cater for the uncertainties, non-linearity and feedback loops inherent in transition processes. The incorporation of more adaptive and reflexive elements is proposed as an alternative. This paper contributes to existing knowledge by critically reflecting on the applicability of TM towards governing sociotechnical transitions in the developing world and by exposing the limitations behind the current thinking underpinning NAMA funding. In conclusion, the systems perspective adopted in sustainability transition theories is thus recommended as a more rewarding approach towards understa
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- 2018
16. Positive results, no negative consequences : no-harm options for article 6
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Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Arens, Christof, and Mersmann, Florian
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The objective of this paper is to analyse and make recommendations on a safeguard system for Article 6 that aims at preventing potential harm that mitigation activities may cause on the ground to local stakeholders and the environment. Following some definitory aspects of what and how to safeguard, the paper analyses a number of safeguard systems and do no harm principles as well as tools to implement them. It then gives an overview on Parties' views on the matter, as uttered in their latest submissions on Art. 6 options, as well as an overview of the references in the UNFCCC's SBSTA Chair's text with respect to sustainable development, safeguards, and human rights issues. The paper closes with recommendations on a possible safeguard system for Article 6.
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- 2018
17. Global climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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On 7-18 November, the twenty-second Conference of the Parties (COP-22) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the twelfth Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP-12) took place in Marrakech. Due to the rapid entry into force of the Paris Agreement, Marrakech also hosted the first Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement (CMA-1). Nobody had expected this one year before in Paris - the entry into force of the Kyoto Protocol, by comparison, had taken eight years. Many hailed the rapid entry into force as further proof of the commitment of the world community to finally tackle the climate problem.
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- 2018
18. Learning from CDM SD tool experience for article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement
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Holm Olsen, Karen, Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Holm Olsen, Karen, Arens, Christof, and Mersmann, Florian
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The Paris Agreement (PA) emphasizes the intrinsic relationship between climate change and sustainable development (SD) and welcomes the 2030 agenda for the global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Yet, there is a lack of assessment approaches to ensure that climate and development goals are achieved in an integrated fashion and trade-offs avoided. Article 6.4 of the PA introduces a new Sustainable Mitigation Mechanism (SMM) with the dual aim to contribute to the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and foster SD. The Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has a similar objective and in 2014, the CDM SD tool was launched by the Executive Board of the CDM to highlight the SD benefits of CDM activities. This article analyses the usefulness of the CDM SD tool for stakeholders and compares the SD tool's SD reporting requirements against other flexible mechanisms and multilateral standards to provide recommendations for improvement. A key conclusion is that the Paris Agreement's SMM has a stronger political mandate than the CDM to measure that SD impacts are "real, measurable and long-term". Recommendations for an improved CDM SD tool are a relevant starting point to develop rules, modalities, and procedures for SD assessment in Article 6.4 as well as for other cooperative mitigation approaches.
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- 2018
19. Learning from CDM SD tool experience for Article 6.4 in the Paris Agreement
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Olsen, Karen Holm, Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Olsen, Karen Holm, Arens, Christof, and Mersmann, Florian
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The Paris Agreement (PA) emphasizes the intrinsic relationship between climate change and sustainable development (SD) and welcomes the 2030 agenda for the global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Yet, there is a lack of assessment approaches to ensure that climate and development goals are achieved in an integrated fashion and trade-offs avoided. Article 6.4 of the PA introduces a new Sustainable Mitigati on Mechanism (SMM) with the dual aim to contribute to the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and foster SD. The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has a similar objective and in 2014, the CDM SD tool was launched by the Executive Board of the CDM to highlight the SD benefits of CDM activities. This article analyses the usefulness of the CDM SD tool for stakeholders and compares the SD tool’s SD reporting requirements against other flexible mechanisms and multilateral standards to provide recommendations for improvement. A key conclusion is that the Paris Agreement’s SMM has a stronger political mandate than the CDM to measure that SD impacts are 'real, measurable and long-term'. Therefore, recommendations for an improved CDM SD tool are a relevant starting point to develop rules, modalities and procedures for SD assessment in Article 6.4 as well as for other cooperative mitigation approaches.
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- 2018
20. Key concepts, core challenges and governance functions of international climate governance
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Oberthür, Sebastian, Hermwille, Lukas, Khandekar, Gauri, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Rayner, Tim, Wyns, Tomas, Mersmann, Florian, Jones, Damon, Kretschmer, Bianka, and Melkie, Mahlet
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- 2017
21. Global climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
On 7-18 November, the twenty-second Conference of the Parties (COP-22) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the twelfth Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP-12) took place in Marrakech. Due to the rapid entry into force of the Paris Agreement, Marrakech also hosted the first Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement (CMA-1). Nobody had expected this one year before in Paris - the entry into force of the Kyoto Protocol, by comparison, had taken eight years. Many hailed the rapid entry into force as further proof of the commitment of the world community to finally tackle the climate problem.
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- 2017
22. The implications of how climate funds conceptualize transformational change in developing countries
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Boodoo, Zyaad, primary, Mersmann, Florian, additional, and Olsen, Karen Holm, additional
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- 2018
- Full Text
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23. Human rights and the clean development mechanism : lessons learned from three case studies
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Peterson, Lauri, Mersmann, Florian, Schade, Jeanette, Hofbauer, Jane Alice, Mayrhofer, Monica, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Peterson, Lauri, Mersmann, Florian, Schade, Jeanette, Hofbauer, Jane Alice, and Mayrhofer, Monica
- Abstract
This article analyses the human rights implications of projects under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). While the CDM is likely to expire in the near future, the experience gained should be used to inform the rules of the new mechanism to be established under the 2015 Paris Agreement. We argue that the CDM and the new mechanism, as international organizations under the guidance of UNFCCC member states, should apply the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. Based on the experience drawn from three case studies (two hydro power projects in Barro Blanco, Panama, and Bujagali, Uganda, and one geothermal energy project in Olkaria, Kenya), we show that CDM projects, while in formal compliance with CDM rules, can lead to a number of human rights infringements. We conclude with a number of recommendations on how to achieve a greater recognition of human rights in the new mechanism under the Paris Agreement.
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- 2017
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24. Two for one : integrating the sustainable development agenda with international climate policy
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Mersmann, Florian, Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Mersmann, Florian, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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2015 was a watershed for international sustainability governance. With the Paris climate agreement and Agenda 2030, the international community adopted new targets and processes which are to guide policy for decades to come. Both emphasise the need for integration. In practice, however, climate change and sustainable development have so far been siloed issues.
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- 2017
25. Implementation of nationally determined contributions : Indonesia country report
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Mersmann, Florian, Wehnert, Timon, Andreeva, Tatiana, Fekete, Hanna, Luna, Lisa, Streitferdt, Verena Katja, Mersmann, Florian, Wehnert, Timon, Andreeva, Tatiana, Fekete, Hanna, Luna, Lisa, and Streitferdt, Verena Katja
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The study analyses the country background, emissions trends, ongoing activities and barriers relating to the implementation of the Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) of Indonesia under the UNFCCC. A special emphasis is laid on further mitigation potentials. Fields of mitigation assessed are land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF) governance and monitoring as well as electricity demand and generation. A chapter is dedicated to the ongoing and planned increase in coal use - contrary to mitigation ambition in other fields - including an analysis of the economic role and local impacts of coal.
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- 2017
26. Setting sails for troubled waters : an assessment of the Marrakech climate conference
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
- Abstract
From 7 to 18 November 2016, the twenty-second Conference of the Parties (COP22) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) took place in Marrakech. Due to the early entry into force of the Paris Agreement, Marrakech also hosted the first Conference of the Parties serving as Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement (CMA1). Researchers from the Wuppertal Institute observed the conference and elaborated a detailed analysis of the results. The report starts by discussing developments regarding the implementation of the Paris Agreement, in particular the detailed "rulebook" and cooperative mechanisms. Next, the article discusses developments in the various avenues for raising climate ambition that have been put in place by the Paris conference: the 2018 facilitative dialogue, the engagement of non-state and sub-national actors, and the elaboration of mid-century climate strategies. In addition, the article discusses other Marrakech developments, in particular on issues of climate finance and adaptation, as well as recent developments in the wider world that have an impact on the UNFCCC, in particular developing alliances, developments in the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and under the Montreal Protocol, and possible repercussions of the US presidential election.
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- 2017
27. Global climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Ott, Hermann E., Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
This article summarises the main outcomes of the Lima UN Climate Conference (COP20 / CMP10). It starts with the discussions under the Durban Platform on developing a new comprehensive climate agreement and increasing short-term ambition and subsequently covers the issues relating to near-term implementation of previous decisions in the areas of transparency, reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, loss and damage, adaptation, finance, and carbon markets.
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- 2016
28. Phoenix from the ashes : an analysis of the Paris Agreement to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change ; part 2
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
On 12 December 2015, the Parties to the UNFCCC adopted the "Paris Agreement". With this step, the world community has agreed on a collective and cooperative path to fight human-induced climate change: After 25 years of UN climate diplomacy, the world's governments have for the first time in history negotiated a treaty which envisages climate action by all nations. The Agreement sets the world on a path that might lead to a decarbonised economy in the second half of the century. Researchers from the Wuppertal Institute have observed COP 21 and elaborated a detailed analysis of the results. The assessment provides an overview of the most important negotiation outcomes, assesses their results as well as shortfalls and provides an outlook of the next steps needed to implement the Paris Agreement's goals and to set the world firmly on a non-fossil based development path.
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- 2016
29. A Learning Experience
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Mersmann, Florian and Reich, Hendrikje
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A major cornerstone on the way to low-carbon sustainable development on a global scale will be a swift and effective implementation of all countries' INDCs submitted to the UNFCCC prior to Paris. However, doing so will require transforming development pathways away from currently pervasive carbon lock- ins. This can only be successful if countries take a systemic view on their development agendas, and link mitigation, adaptation and other developmental priorities together for a coherent overarching sustainable development strategy. The ownership for this process needs to be with the countries themselves as such strategies touch fundamentally upon national policy-making and implementation. At the same time, developing countries have access to bi- and multilateral financial and technical cooperation. To enable a systemic, country-led perspective, development cooperation needs to shift its paradigms away from currently prevalent project-level interventions. A truly innovative and transformational shift with the objective of pursuing a low-carbon and climate resilient society needs to open up space for experimentation as new ways of doing things need to be put into practice. Experiments will not always be successful, but foster learning on a national as well as an international level on pitfalls and solutions in new approaches to low-carbon sustainable development. Not least, there needs to be a renewed focus on programmatic approaches that link various topical domains for a country-led process, and a critical look at development work that is "doomed to succeed". Our article draws from systems theory, development studies and recent work on transitions studies and transformational change in the international domain. It links up different theoretical concepts with practical approaches in order to outline a future development agenda that will be owned by developing countries and supported non-invasively by bi- and multilateral development cooperation to foster low-carbon development pathways that are urgently needed to solve the climate crisis.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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30. Human rights and the clean development mechanism: lessons learned from three case studies
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, primary, Peterson, Lauri, additional, Mersmann, Florian, additional, Schade, Jeanette, additional, Hofbauer, Jane Alice, additional, and Mayrhofer, Monika, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Learning from CDM SD tool experience for Article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement
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Olsen, Karen Holm, primary, Arens, Christof, additional, and Mersmann, Florian, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
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32. Two for One: Integrating the Sustainable Development Agenda with International Climate Policy
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, primary, Mersmann, Florian, additional, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
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33. 3. Global Climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, primary, Arens, Christof, additional, Hermwille, Lukas, additional, Kreibich, Nicolas, additional, Mersmann, Florian, additional, Ott, Hermann E, additional, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
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34. Reforming the CDM SD Tool. Recommendations for Improvement
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Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Beuermann, Christiane, Rudolph, Frederic, Olsen, Karen Holm, Bakhtiari, Fatemeh, Hinostroza, Miriam L., and Fenhann, Jørgen Villy
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SDG 13 - Climate Action - Abstract
In 2015 three high-level processes to achieve a paradigm shift towards a sustainable and low-carbon development are running in parallel. The general idea behind these processes is to specify global and national objectives in terms of environmental protection, development and climate protection. We face a debate on firstly Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the UN Post-2015 Development Agenda originating from the Rio+20 process and secondly on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that may be merged with the SDGs. Thirdly parties are negotiating a new Climate Convention under the UNFCCC. These processes are intended to provide inspiration for action and deliver objectives for implementation at the national level supported by international institutions. A globally defined but flexible approach for assessing sustainable development can provide invaluable support towards a globally harmonised assessment of sustainable development, comparable through mitigation mechanisms and embedded into development planning at the national level. This can then be used to integrate sustainability assessment standards into Performance Measurement Systems such as national Monitoring, Reporting and Verification Systems. On the other hand, compliance with standards ensures that countries also meet the requirements of international financial institutions such as the Green Climate Fund. Sustainable development benefits of climate protection instruments are highly relevant for development paths beyond aspects of climate change. Mitigation measures may include additional health, social, environmental and macro-economic as well as equity benefits. With the prospect of a new climate protection agreement at the end of 2015, some developing countries have already started to prepare and develop their climate policies. Benefits of sustainable development in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and new market mechanisms indeed may have the potential to meet the needs of developing countries both in terms of sustainable development and mitigation measures. For this purpose, the CDM Sustainable Development Tool offers initial steps towards a globally applicable standard under an international UN institution. The Wuppertal Institute, together with UNEP DTU Partnership, has developed recommendations for its revision, improvement and enhancement that are outlined in this study.
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- 2015
35. Mapping the Indicators. An Analysis of Sustainable Development Requirements of Selected Market Mechanisms and Multilateral Institutions
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Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Beuermann, Christiane, Rudolph, Frederic, Olsen, Karen Holm, and Fenhann, Jørgen Villy
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SDG 13 - Climate Action ,SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth - Abstract
Investors are paying more and more attention to the co-benefits of climate finance. Financing activities aimed at emission mitigation must not only result in the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, the enhancement of mitigation, adaptive capacity and adaptation strategies, but should also produce additional outcomes on other environmental, social or economic aspects of sustainable development. The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) was created precisely to cover these two aspects: firstly, to achieve cost-effective mitigation of greenhouse gases and secondly, to assist developing countries in achieving sustainable development based on their national development priorities and strategies. However, complying with the second objective turned out to be problematic. Registered projects appeared that had no proven sustainable development benefits, or even perceived negative impacts. Consequently, critique was raised that the current set-up is weak due to the lack of clear and transparent sustainable development criteria in many host countries, and whether the intended sustainable development benefits are actually achieved in the absence of standards or monitoring, reporting and verification procedures,. To strengthen the current system for assessing the impact of sustainable development within CDM projects, even the High-Level Panel on the CDM Policy Dialogue recommended introducing monitoring, reporting and verification schemes for measuring the outcomes. The accent was to enhance safeguards against the risk of negative impact and to support host countries with capacity-building and sharing examples of best practice. The issue was raised to the highest political level when the CMP to the Kyoto Protocol in Durban requested the CDM Executive Board to develop voluntary measures with the aim of highlighting CDM projects’ co-benefits, while preserving the right of host parties to determine their sustainable development criteria. This decision instigated the UNFCCC Secretariats development of the voluntary Sustainable Development Tool, which was approved by the CDM Executive Board in late 2012. A robust assessment of the impact of sustainable development in CDM projects is important to ensure the social and ecological integrity of the mechanism and compliance with the objectives of sustainable development as stated in the Kyoto Protocol. Research and best practice experience into how sustainable development issues are integrated into mitigation actions through the CDM Sustainable Development Tool and other respective standards can help inform the development of Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions and future mechanisms on sustainable development assessment methods. As sustainable development is a complex multilayer process covering environmental as well as social and economic aspects that can be affected both positively and negatively, there is a variety of possibilities of how to assess the impact an intervention may have. The high number of approaches analysed by this study reflects this. The contractors assessed the Sustainable Development Tool against international standards for sustainability assessment by comparing it with other mechanisms such as voluntary carbon offset schemes as well as emerging policy frameworks.
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- 2015
36. Assessing Usefulness. Do Stakeholders Regard the CDM's SD Tool as Practicial?
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Olsen, Karen Holm, Fenhann, Jørgen Villy, Hinostroza, Miriam L., Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Beuermann, Christiane, and Rudolph, Frederic
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SDG 13 - Climate Action - Abstract
One of the objectives of the CDM (Clean Development Mechanism) which is strongly embedded in the Kyoto Protocol, is to contribute to the sustainable development of the host countries in addition to climate protection. However, some non-governmental organisations have signalled the poor implementation of this requirement. The independent High-Level Panel on the CDM Policy Dialogue has also considered the need for improvement. Subsequently the Conference of the Parties serving as the meetings of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP) 7 at Durban called on the CDM Executive Board to develop a tool for voluntary use in order to highlight the contribution of CDM to sustainability. As a result, in late 2012 The Sustainable Development Tool was developed and adopted. The fact that CDM projects should support sustainable development in the host countries is a key element of the CDM, which is why past experience suggests that a strong approach to the assessment of projects is important. Meanwhile, many innovative approaches taken by Designated National Authorities (DNAs) have superseded the restraint that was prevalent in earlier sustainability assessment with rather general sustainability criteria, superficial examinations and difficult stakeholder consultations. Such new approaches include scoring of indicators, priority sectors, checklists as well as improved documentation requirements for verification, municipal approval or on-site visits by DNA staff. When developing the Sustainable Development Tool, it is important not to neglect or bypass the needs of the users. Accordingly, the paper at hand looks into user-friendliness and the suitability of the sustainability tool from three perspectives - DNAs, governments with a programme of buying credits from projects with high sustainability contributions, and project developers. Host countries of different size and various levels of experience with CDM and sustainability assessment and project developers with expertise for various types of projects were interviewed in a survey about their experiences. Subjects were the sustainability assessment of CDM projects by the host country, the applicability of the Sustainable Development Tool and the national sustainability assessment. The results were evaluated to see how closely the Sustainable Development Tool matched the needs of project developers and buyers. As one main conclusion the study sees the need to further include safeguards against negative impacts of CDM projects on local communities or the environment into the Sustainable Development Tool and to elaborate methods to quantify and monetize benefits. In addition the experiences with the Tool for the CDM may be further explored to enlighten potentials of simplification and unification for new mitigation mechanisms.
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- 2015
37. A first assessment of the climate conference in Lima : COP20 moves at a snail's pace on the road to Paris 2015
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Ott, Hermann E., Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, Obergassel, Wolfgang, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
The 2014 United Nations Climate Change Conference had been scheduled from 1 to 12 December in Lima/Peru. While in the run-up to the conference, China and the US in a surprise bilateral move had announced plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions that exceeded expectations, the conference was characterised once again by a deep division between key players from the former so-called "developed" and "developing" world. The negotiations thus took 32 hours longer than planned and ended on Sunday morning at 1.22 am. More importantly, the conference failed almost completely to resolve the tasks it was supposed to do in order to prepare the last round of negotiations before next year's conference in Paris 2015, which is supposed to deliver a comprehensive future climate agreement. A team of researchers from the Wuppertal Institute attended the conference and have compiled a first assessment of the results.
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- 2015
38. Global climate
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Sterk, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, and Wehnert, Timon
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ddc:320 - Abstract
In what has become normal procedure at the international climate negotiations, the 2013 United Nations climate conference in Warsaw (the nineteenth Conference of the Parties (COP 19) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the ninth Conference of Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 9)) once again seemed on the brink of collapse and concluded more than one day behind schedule, in the evening of Saturday 23 November 2013. However, on most of the key issues it made only scant progress. This report lays out the main developments in Warsaw and assesses the main outcomes. It starts with the discussions under the Durban Platform on developing a new comprehensive climate agreement by 2015 and increasing short-term ambition and subsequently covers the issues relating to near-term implementation of previous decisions in the areas of emission reductions and transparency, adaptation, loss and damage, finance and technology.
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- 2015
39. Phoenix from the ashes : an analysis of the Paris Agreement to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change ; part 1
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Kreibich, Nicolas, Mersmann, Florian, Ott, Hermann E., and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
On 12 December 2015, the Parties to the UNFCCC adopted the "Paris Agreement". With this step, the world community has agreed on a collective and cooperative path to fight human-induced climate change: After 25 years of UN climate diplomacy, the world's governments have for the first time in history negotiated a treaty which envisages climate action by all nations. The Agreement sets the world on a path that might lead to a decarbonised economy in the second half of the century. Researchers from the Wuppertal Institute have observed COP 21 and elaborated a detailed analysis of the results. The assessment provides an overview of the most important negotiation outcomes, assesses their results as well as shortfalls and provides an outlook of the next steps needed to implement the Paris Agreement's goals and to set the world firmly on a non-fossil based development path.
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- 2015
40. Mitigation commitments and fair effort sharing in a new comprehensive climate agreement starting 2020
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Ancygier, Andrzej, Cantzler, Jasmin, Fekete, Hanna, Hagemann, Markus, Höhne, Niklas, Kandy, Daniel, Kästner, Antje, Kersting, Jan, Köhne, Anja, Lindberg, Marie, Mersmann, Florian, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Siemons, Anne, Schumacher, Katja, Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, Wehnert, Timon, and Eisbrenner, Katja
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Displaced, evicted or resettled by climate change measures : neglecting the rights of affected communities in the case of the Bujagali hydropower plant
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Mayrhofer, Monika, Mersmann, Florian, Mayrhofer, Monika, and Mersmann, Florian
- Published
- 2016
42. Human rights performance in EU climate policy : the role of European states in climate measures, and access to justice for affected populations ; synthesis report
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Ammer, Margit, Hofbauer, Jane Alice, Mayrhofer, Monika, Mersmann, Florian, Obergassel, Wolfgang, Schade, Jeanette, Ammer, Margit, Hofbauer, Jane Alice, Mayrhofer, Monika, Mersmann, Florian, Obergassel, Wolfgang, and Schade, Jeanette
- Abstract
Measures to address climate change can result in human rights violations when the rights of affected populations are not taken into consideration. Climate change projects in so-called "developing" countries are often financed and/or also implemented by industrialised countries. The research project ClimAccount Human Rights Accountability of the EU and Austria for Climate Policies in Third Countries and their possible Effects on Migration focused on the accountability of the EU and its Member States with regard to negative impacts of climate change measures they are involved in on human rights in third countries - especially those associated with "migration effects". Based on three case studies - projects registered under the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism - the human rights dimension of climate change action was discussed, areas of human rights concerns that were discernible in all three case study projects were identified, the issue of extraterritorial human rights obligations was analysed and the subject of access to justice was scrutinized.
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- 2016
43. Evaluation and development of recommendations on the CDM EB's Sustainable Development tool including the sustainability requirements of other flexible mechanisms
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Arens, Christof, Beuermann, Christiane, Mersmann, Florian, Rudolph, Frederic, Holm Olsen, Karen, Fenhann, Joergen, Hinostroza, Miriam, Bakhtiari, Fatemeh, Arens, Christof, Beuermann, Christiane, Mersmann, Florian, Rudolph, Frederic, Holm Olsen, Karen, Fenhann, Joergen, Hinostroza, Miriam, and Bakhtiari, Fatemeh
- Abstract
The research project seeks to identify the CDM SD tool's possible shortcomings, and to make structured recommendations on how to improve the EB's SD tool. Findings from this project are meant to have a lighthouse effect on the development of provisions on Sustainable Development within other carbon mechanisms of the UNFCCC and beyond. This report represents the consolidated findings of three work packages within this research project. The first chapter provides some background on the subject at hand, and leads into the report. The following chapter covers the assessment and comparison of the SD provisions of selected flexible mechanisms and multilateral standards.
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- 2016
44. Eine Industrieregion im Wandel : energie- und klimapolitische Rahmenbedingungen, Strategien und Instrumente in NRW ; eine Fallstudie im Rahmen des Projekts 'Energy Transition Platform 2015-2017' ; Endbericht
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Vallentin, Daniel, Fischedick, Manfred, Knoop, Katharina, Mersmann, Florian, Mölter, Helena, Schneider, Clemens, Schüwer, Dietmar, Tschache, Björn, Zeiss, Christoph, Vallentin, Daniel, Fischedick, Manfred, Knoop, Katharina, Mersmann, Florian, Mölter, Helena, Schneider, Clemens, Schüwer, Dietmar, Tschache, Björn, and Zeiss, Christoph
- Abstract
Um weltweit hochindustrialisierte, energieintensive Bundesländer und Regionen bei der Entwicklung und Umsetzung von innovativer Klimapolitik zu unterstützen, wurde die "Energy Transition Platform" ins Leben gerufen. Ziel ist der Austausch von Erfahrungen sowie eine Einflussnahme auf den internationalen Klimadialog. Für diesen Austausch- und Dialogprozess erarbeitete das Wuppertal Institut für die "Climate Group" die Fallstudie "Eine Industrieregion im Wandel - Energie- und klimapolitische Rahmenbedingungen, Strategien und Instrumente in NRW". In dem Bericht werden aktuelle energie- und klimapolitische Entwicklungen, Politikinstrumente und Modellprojekte dargestellt und diskutiert. Die Fallstudie macht deutlich, dass Nordrhein-Westfalen bei der Umsetzung der Energiewende zwar vor besonderen Herausforderungen steht, die Modernisierung des Energiesystems und des Industriestandortes NRW jedoch mit Hilfe eines vielfältigen Instrumentariums systematisch und intensiv angeht. Eine solche proaktive und langfristig ausgelegte Herangehensweise ist zentrale Voraussetzung dafür, dass die bevorstehende Transformation letztlich nicht zu einem kaum steuerbaren Strukturbruch in NRW und seinen Regionen und Kommunen führt, sondern zu einem schrittweisen Strukturwandel, der von Politik, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft gemeinsam gestaltet wird.
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- 2016
45. A learning experience : integrating theory and practice for the implementation of INDCs ; thinkpiece
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Mersmann, Florian, Reich, Hendrikje, Mersmann, Florian, and Reich, Hendrikje
- Abstract
A major cornerstone on the way to low-carbon sustainable development on a global scale will be a swift and effective implementation of all countries' INDCs submitted to the UNFCCC prior to Paris. However, doing so will require transforming development pathways away from currently pervasive carbon lock-ins. This can only be successful if countries take a systemic view on their development agendas, and link mitigation, adaptation and other developmental priorities together for a coherent overarching sustainable development strategy. The ownership for this process needs to be with the countries themselves as such strategies touch fundamentally upon national policy-making and implementation. At the same time, developing countries have access to bi- and multilateral financial and technical cooperation. To enable a systemic, country-led perspective, development cooperation needs to shift its paradigms away from currently prevalent project-level interventions. A truly innovative and transformational shift with the objective of pursuing a low-carbon and climate resilient society needs to open up space for experimentation as new ways of doing things need to be put into practice. Experiments will not always be successful, but foster learning on a national as well as an international level on pitfalls and solutions in new approaches to low-carbon sustainable development. Not least, there needs to be a renewed focus on programmatic approaches that link various topical domains for a country-led process, and a critical look at development work that is "doomed to succeed". Our article draws from systems theory, development studies and recent work on transitions studies and transformational change in the international domain. It links up different theoretical concepts with practical approaches in order to outline a future development agenda that will be owned by developing countries and supported non-invasively by bi- and multilateral development cooperation to foster low-carbon de
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- 2016
46. From theory to practice: Understanding transformational change in NAMAs
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Mersmann, Florian, Olsen, Karen Holm, Wehnert, Timon, Boodoo, Zyaad, and Fenhann, Jørgen Villy
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The objective of the concept paper is to propose an operational definition for what transformational change means in the context of NAMAs, taking into consideration ongoing discussions among NAMA experts, and to give an overview of theoretical approaches to sustainability transitions and transformational change, exploring their possible applicability to NAMAs. The theoretical approaches are the basis to propose hypotheses for the dynamics, indicators and success factors that foster transformational change, which is necessary to assess whether a NAMA intervention has been or can be transformational to achieve low carbon and sustainable development goals. This paper will serve as the basis for further exploration of a framework to assess the potential for transformational impacts of NAMAs.
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- 2014
47. Climate policy - road works and new horizons : an assessment of the UNFCCC process from Lima to Paris and beyond
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Ott, Hermann E., Obergassel, Wolfgang, Arens, Christof, Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna
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ddc:320 - Abstract
This paper analyses the results of the climate conference in Lima 2014 in the light of the coming climate summit in Paris by the end of this year (COP21). The authors from the Wuppertal Institute make recommendations for the improvement of the current cooperation in the context of the climate convention and they suggest to complement the existing UN regime with a club of forerunner countries in order to provide new breath for international climate policy.
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- 2014
48. 3. Global Climate
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Obergassel, Wolfgang, primary, Arens, Christof, additional, Hermwille, Lukas, additional, Kreibich, Nicolas, additional, Mersmann, Florian, additional, Ott, Hermann E, additional, and Wang-Helmreich, Hanna, additional
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Assessing usefulness : do stakeholders regard the CDM's SD tool as practical?
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Holm Olsen, Karen, Fenhann, Joergen, Hinostroza, Miriam, Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Beuermann, Christiane, Rudolph, Frederic, Holm Olsen, Karen, Fenhann, Joergen, Hinostroza, Miriam, Arens, Christof, Mersmann, Florian, Beuermann, Christiane, and Rudolph, Frederic
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- 2015
50. Financing additional emission reductions : what can be learned from the CDM
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Hermwille, Lukas, Mersmann, Florian, Hermwille, Lukas, and Mersmann, Florian
- Abstract
Many have hoped that the CDM's Additionality, if applied to the wider climate finance domain, can contribute to standardizing the funding criteria. This JIKO Policy Brief therefore explore options of applying the CDM's to do just that. The authors highlight issues of environmental system integrity and efficient allocation of funding, and discuss potential limits of the CDM's Additionality concept in its current form, if applied to climate finance. The prospects are limited, because a clear attribution of emission reductions is almost impossible in a system that does not have as well-defined borders as the zero-sum-game of tradable emission reductions under a capped environment.The authors propose some inroutes to adapting the current approach to Additionality in this context, and pose a number of questions that can help to further discuss and refine the CDM's Additionality concept to make it better applicable for a future, globally inclusive climate regime.
- Published
- 2015
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