Foreign Policy Blogs

Tag Archives: UNFCCC

Back to Bonn

Bonn is home base for the Secretariat of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and it’s where meetings are taking place this week to advance international agreement.  With Copenhagen in the rear-view mirror and Cancun up ahead, there is a lot of discussion going of technical matters, and lots of side meetings […]

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Climate Talks

We are six months out from Copenhagen and further talks in Bonn, where the UNFCCC is headquartered, have just concluded.  The release from the UNFCCC says the recent talks made “progress on fleshing out specifics” for a global climate change regime.  There were 5,500 participants, including government delegates from over 180 countries, and reps from […]

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Meetings and Progress – after Copenhagen

So now it’s four months after the meetings in Copenhagen.  I’m in the group who thinks that more was accomplished than meets the eye and that it was an important way station to achieving more international agreement on stemming the tide of greenhouse gases we confront and adapting to the massive impacts they’ve already caused […]

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The Reading List

As you might imagine, I subscribe to a number of feeds on climate, energy and sustainability.  Here are a few that I highly recommend to you. Nature Reports Climate Change, from the Nature Publishing Group, is an excellent resource on climate science and related matters.  Its companion blog, Climate Feedback, has timely and compelling coverage […]

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Post-Copenhagen Coverage

There is a blockbuster piece at Salon.com that looks at Five common mistakes in the coverage of the Copenhagen Accord.  It punctures some of the fallacies that have abounded in some quarters such as that there could have been a better Accord voted on by the delegates, that the smaller developing nations rejected the Accord, […]

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"The Copenhagen Accord"

This is the document that has taken many years and much blood, sweat, tears and toil from thousands of people to produce.  Yvo de Boer, head of the UNFCCC, described the accord as “politically important.” It provides an “architecture for a response to climate change.” The “LA Times” had this story this morning:  Climate summit ends […]

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Lula: Making the Case at Copenhagen

Lula: Making the Case at Copenhagen

President Lula made his case for greenhouse gas emissions reductions at the UNFCCC fifteenth Conference of the Parties (COP15) at Copenhagen. In an open letter published in the Christian Science Monitor, Lula admonished, “It is beyond doubt that both the benefits of economic development as well as the costs of environmental degradation over the past […]

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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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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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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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Yvo de Boer on The State of the Negotiations

Here’s a succinct and hopeful message from UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer on where we are on the international politics.  We will know more this week after the UN Climate Summit and the G20 meetings.

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Yvo de Boer's Perspective

As you no doubt know, the latest round of UNFCCC negotiations concluded in Bonn last week.  UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer seemed generally pleased.  The representatives had, for the first time, a negotiating text with which to work.  It was delivered on schedule and that in itself was a significant achievement.  The AP reported […]

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Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate

As a complement to the UNFCCC process that is building toward agreement in Copenhagen in December (I fervently hope), President Obama called for a series of meetings of the world’s major economies.  These economies include the world’s largest contributors to climate change, including the top four of China, the US, Indonesia and Brazil.  (Remember that […]

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Bonn

There are a series of UNFCCC meetings this year leading up to the Copenhagen Conference of the Parties – the 15th COP.  As you know, Copenhagen is where the post-Kyoto agreement is going to be finalized.  The first of the five planned negotiating sessions leading up to the COP wrapped up in Bonn last week.  […]

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The White House Keeps Driving to the Hoop

I don’t know much about President Obama’s game, but I’m guessing, based on his aggressive moves on climate change and energy since just about the moment he took office, that he’s not shy about driving hard to the inside to make points.  I’ve been writing here since November about his appointments and initiatives and I’ve […]

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