Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: Copenhagen

Still Willin'

Still Willin'

“And I’ve been from Tucson to Tucumcari Tehachapi to Tonapah… And I’m still willin’ To be movin’.” That’s what COP 15 feels like to me – from 3,500 miles away, admittedly, but like a truckdriver that’s seen it all, and is still willin’.  I said yesterday that the lead negotiators would need “poise, intelligence, good […]

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Antepenultimate Day at COP 15

Here are a couple of updates on progress – or the dearth thereof – at the talks in Copenhagen.  The first is from the “LA Times” – Developing nations hold the key to Copenhagen climate agreement.  The developed countries have “…ramped up pressure on emerging economies China and India, as well as African and island […]

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Countdown in Copenhagen

I read a really good book by Steve Schlesinger a few years back called Act of Creation.  It’s about the San Francisco conference at which the United Nations was born.  There was a lot of intrigue and high drama, with plenty at stake.  There are stories of heroes, too, like Edward Stettinius, the unsung Secretary […]

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Brazil’s Climate Change Performance

Brazil’s Climate Change Performance

Brazil’s climate change policy performance now leads the world according to Climate Change Performance Index results for 2010 published by GermanWatch and the Climate Action Network of Europe.

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Copenhagen Buzz

There’s plenty of sturm und drang coming from COP 15.  The “FT” reports this morning that the African states first walked out then returned, having claimed “…that they had won some concessions.” The “Financial Times” front page this morning declared China signals climate funds shift.  Apparently, the PRC “… abandoned its demand for funding from […]

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Obama and Copenhagen

I have not been, like most of the rest of the climate change cognoscenti, writing nonstop about Copenhagen this week.  I have been working on reviewing thesis work from students in the MS in Global Affairs program at NYU where I teach on climate change.  I’ve had one blockbuster thesis on how to make the […]

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Anteing Up

Anteing Up

If you play poker you know that all the players have to ante up with a stake before each new deal.  You have to “feed the kitty” – or you don’t play.  Perhaps not coincidentally, parties that have an interest in a particular project, enterprise or, in the case of COP 15, addressing the looming […]

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Getting Better All The Time

If you’ve been betting on Copenhagen, as many of us have, then things are looking up.  “President Barack Obama will attend climate-change talks in Copenhagen next month, offering an emissions-cut goal of about 17 percent by 2020…”  reports Bloomberg News here. The White House blog confirms this and bullets the major initiatives that the administration […]

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Betting on Copenhagen

There are all sorts of prognoses for what’s going to happen in a couple of weeks at the 15th Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC (COP15).  Some are calling this the most important international meeting of minds since the Bretton Woods and San Francisco conferences created much of the political architecture for the postwar […]

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More State of Play – Renewables and Efficiency Division

More State of Play – Renewables and Efficiency Division

Several recent posts here have looked at the state of play leading up to the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP 15) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).   I’ve been generally optimistic about prospects – although the title of my last post may belie that.  There are several reasons why I’m […]

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A Global Suicide Note?

José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, has been a leading proponent of strong action against climate change, not only in the 27-nation European Union, but globally.  The EU has been in the vanguard, particularly when the executive branch of the US was for eight years a captive to special interests and a politics […]

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Copenhagen or Bust?

It appears that there’s going to be a tremendous amount of activity coming out of Copenhagen – as we’ve known for a long time – but no final agreement.  In a dramatic move, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, the Danish Prime Minister, flew to Singapore to meet with key leaders at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meetings.  […]

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Al Gore's New Book – and Copenhagen

Vice President Al Gore, Nobel Peace Laureate, venture capitalist, author, lecturer, Academy Award winner, activist, the man Denialists love to hate, and the man some others canonize as the path-breaking visionary on the threat of global climate change, has a new book out:  Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis.  It has a […]

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The State of Play – International Division

I wrote a thumbnail sketch the other day of where we are in the US on domestic climate change and energy legislation.  Let’s now take a quick look at how things are shaping up only 37 days before Copenhagen. As you know, the world has been building toward the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP […]

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Best of the Web: The “Go Rio!” Video Edition

Congrats to the people of Rio de Janeiro on their city’s winning bid to host the 2016 Summer Olympics. It’s exciting and just plain fair that the Games will finally come to South America. Chicago will get over it. So will Oprah Winfrey, who still wields the power to send the entire population of Chicago […]

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