Content
September 2018, Volume 18, Issue 8
- 992-1011 Effectiveness of pilot carbon emissions trading systems in China
by Zhe Deng & Dongya Li & Tao Pang & Maosheng Duan - 1012-1027 Striving for equivalency across the Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Québec carbon pricing systems: the Pan-Canadian carbon pricing benchmark
by Sharon Mascher - 1028-1043 The impact of the Tokyo Metropolitan Emissions Trading Scheme on reducing greenhouse gas emissions: findings from a facility-based study
by Masayo Wakabayashi & Osamu Kimura - 1044-1058 Addressing regional disparities in allowance allocation in China’s national emissions trading scheme
by Tao Pang & Maosheng Duan & Zhe Deng - 1059-1065 Challenges to addressing non-CO2 greenhouse gases in China’s long-term climate strategy
by Xin Wang & Fei Teng & Jingjing Zhang & Nina Khanna & Jiang Lin - 1066-1075 CO2 abatement goals for international shipping
by Michael Traut & Alice Larkin & Kevin Anderson & Christophe McGlade & Maria Sharmina & Tristan Smith - 1076-1086 Financing loss and damage: reviewing options under the Warsaw International Mechanism
by Jonathan Gewirtzman & Sujay Natson & Julie-Anne Richards & Victoria Hoffmeister & Alexis Durand & Romain Weikmans & Saleemul Huq & J. Timmons Roberts
August 2018, Volume 18, Issue 7
- 1-1 Erratum
by The Editors - 813-817 US and international climate policy under President Trump
by Frank Jotzo & Joanna Depledge & Harald Winkler
July 2018, Volume 18, Issue 6
- 690-714 What if negative emission technologies fail at scale? Implications of the Paris Agreement for big emitting nations
by Alice Larkin & Jaise Kuriakose & Maria Sharmina & Kevin Anderson - 715-728 The Korean emissions trading scheme: business perspectives on the early years of operations
by Sunhee Suk & SangYeop Lee & Yu Shim Jeong
May 2018, Volume 18, Issue 5
- 543-555 Political communication and public support for climate mitigation policies: a country-comparative perspective
by Stefan Linde - 593-599 Entry into force and then? The Paris agreement and state accountability
by Sylvia I. Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen & Maja Groff & Peter A. Tamás & Arthur L. Dahl & Marie Harder & Graham Hassall - 600-611 Broadening the scope of loss and damage to legal liability: an experiment
by Elisabeth Gsottbauer & Robert Gampfer & Elizabeth Bernold & Anna-Mateja Delas - 612-626 Informing climate policy through institutional collaboration: reflections on the preparation of Colombia’s nationally determined contribution
by Alessandro De Pinto & Ana Maria Loboguerrero & Mario Londoño & Katherine Ovalle Sanabria & Rodrigo Suarez Castaño - 642-654 Fairness in the climate negotiations: what explains variation in parties’ expressed conceptions?
by Vegard Tørstad & Håkon Sælen
April 2018, Volume 18, Issue 4
- 383-395 Learning from CDM SD tool experience for Article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement
by Karen Holm Olsen & Christof Arens & Florian Mersmann - 396-412 Vehicle tax policies and new passenger car CO2 performance in EU member states
by Denis Dineen & Lisa Ryan & Brian Ó Gallachóir - 413-424 Assessing the EU ETS with a bottom-up, multi-sector model
by Pablo Pintos & Pedro Linares - 425-441 Assessing the ambition of post-2020 climate targets: a comprehensive framework
by Niklas Höhne & Hanna Fekete & Michel G.J. den Elzen & Andries F. Hof & Takeshi Kuramochi - 442-458 The impact of shale gas on the costs of climate policy
by Jan Kersting & Vicki Duscha & Joachim Schleich & Kimon Keramidas - 459-470 Could baseline establishment be counterproductive for emissions reduction? Insights from Vietnam’s building sector
by Maryna Karavai & Søren E. Lütken & Daniel Puig - 471-484 Public perception of climate engineering and carbon capture and storage in Germany: survey evidence
by Carola Braun & Christine Merk & Gert Pönitzsch & Katrin Rehdanz & Ulrich Schmidt - 485-498 Integrating behavioural economics into climate-economy models: some policy lessons
by Karolina Safarzyńska - 499-511 Institutional dimensions of climate change adaptation: insights from the Philippines
by Sining C. Cuevas - 512-525 Convergence of per capita carbon dioxide emissions: implications and meta-analysis
by Sevil Acar & Patrik Söderholm & Runar Brännlund - 526-541 Climate-smart agriculture: perspectives and framings
by Alvin Chandra & Karen E. McNamara & Paul Dargusch
February 2018, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 141-145 Fiji-in-Bonn: will the ‘Talanoa spirit’ prevail?
by Harald Winkler & Joanna Depledge - 146-150 Adaptation and poverty reduction in Mozambique: an opportunity for developing countries to lead
by Colin F. Quinn & Jennifer F. Howard & Chen Chen & Joyce E. Coffee & Carlos E. Quintela & Britt A. Parker & Joel B. Smith - 151-169 Options to overcome the barriers to pricing European agricultural emissions
by Godefroy Grosjean & Sabine Fuss & Nicolas Koch & Benjamin L. Bodirsky & Stéphane De Cara & William Acworth - 170-183 Natural gas and climate finance
by Vanesa Castán Broto - 184-197 The role of money and the financial sector in energy-economy models used for assessing climate and energy policy
by Hector Pollitt & Jean-Francois Mercure - 198-209 Effects of pollution control measures on carbon emission reduction in China: evidence from the 11th and 12th Five-Year Plans
by Alun Gu & Fei Teng & Xiangzhao Feng - 210-220 Four intermediate goals: a methodology for evaluation of climate mitigation policy packages
by Yasuko Kameyama & Akinori Kawamoto - 221-234 When does economic development promote mitigation and why?
by Zeynep Clulow - 235-245 Characteristics of forest carbon credit transactions in the voluntary carbon market
by Dong-Ho Lee & Dong-hwan Kim & Seong-il Kim - 246-257 Could fiscal policies induce green innovation in developing countries? The case of Brazilian manufacturing sectors
by Camila Gramkow & Annela Anger-Kraavi - 258-273 Ex-post cap adjustment for China’s ETS: an applicable indexation rule, simulating the Hubei ETS, and implications for a national scheme
by Banban Wang & Frank Jotzo & Shaozhou Qi
January 2018, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-13 Defining deep decarbonization pathways for Switzerland: an economic evaluation
by Frédéric Babonneau & Philippe Thalmann & Marc Vielle - 14-23 Place-based or sector-based adaptation? A case study of municipal and fishery policy integration
by Ahmed Khan & Anthony Charles & Derek Armitage - 24-35 Effective and geographically balanced? An output-based assessment of non-state climate actions
by Sander Chan & Robert Falkner & Matthew Goldberg & Harro van Asselt - 36-41 China’s changing economy and emissions trajectory: following global trends
by Mukul Sanwal & Xinzhu Zheng - 42-48 The contribution of forest carbon credit projects to addressing the climate change challenge
by Wytze van der Gaast & Richard Sikkema & Moriz Vohrer - 49-62 Adaptation to climate change in Bangladesh
by Isaure Delaporte & Mathilde Maurel - 63-75 Urban vulnerability and adaptation to heatwaves: a case study of Graz (Austria)
by Christiane Reischl & Romana Rauter & Alfred Posch - 76-85 Global impact of a climate treaty if the Human Development Index replaces GDP as a welfare proxy
by Jeroen C. J. M. van den Bergh & W. J. Wouter Botzen - 86-98 Mainstreaming climate change adaptation into inland aquaculture policies in Thailand
by Anuwat Uppanunchai & Chanagun Chitmanat & Louis Lebel - 99-110 Air quality benefit of China’s mitigation target to peak its emission by 2030
by Xi Yang & Fei Teng - 111-117 The complex decision-making of climate-induced relocation: adaptation and loss and damage
by Karen E. McNamara & Robin Bronen & Nishara Fernando & Silja Klepp - 118-128 The challenges of monitoring national climate policy: learning lessons from the EU
by Jonas J. Schoenefeld & Mikael Hildén & Andrew J. Jordan - 129-139 Could Cohesion Policy push EU climate efforts?
by Michal Nekvasil & Bedřich Moldan
November 2017, Volume 17, Issue 8
- 1-1 Corrigendum
by The Editors - 1-1 Editorial Board
by The Editors - 947-961 Korea’s approach to overcoming difficulties in adopting the emission trading scheme
by Hyungna Oh & Junwon Hyon & Jin-Oh Kim - 962-981 What role for climate negotiations on technology transfer?
by Matthieu Glachant & Antoine Dechezleprêtre - 982-997 Read all about it!? Public accountability, fragmented global climate governance and the media
by Sylvia I. Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen & Lars Friberg & Edoardo Saccenti - 998-1013 Implications of global emission policy scenarios for domestic agriculture: a New Zealand case study
by Zack Dorner & Suzi Kerr - 1014-1030 Interactions between European agricultural policy and climate change: a Slovenian case study
by Emil Erjavec & Tina Volk & Miroslav Rednak & Ilona Rac & Barbara Zagorc & Ben Moljk & Jaka Žgajnar - 1031-1045 Delivering the two degree global climate change target using a flexible ratchet framework
by Hannah Ritchie & David S. Reay - 1057-1064 Unleakable carbon
by Margaret F. Hendrick & Shanna Cleveland & Nathan G. Phillips - 1065-1075 Lessons from co-impacts assessment under the Mitigation Action Plans and Scenarios (MAPS) Programme
by Brett Cohen & Emily Tyler & Marta Torres Gunfaus
October 2017, Volume 17, Issue 7
- 819-824 Changing the game: the Paris Agreement and the role of scientific communities
by Timothée Ourbak & Laurence Tubiana - 825-831 What does the Paris Agreement mean for adaptation?
by Alexandra Lesnikowski & James Ford & Robbert Biesbroek & Lea Berrang-Ford & Michelle Maillet & Malcolm Araos & Stephanie E. Austin - 832-852 Exploring the financial and investment implications of the Paris Agreement
by Stephen Peake & Paul Ekins - 891-914 Reforming fossil fuel subsidies: drivers, barriers and the state of progress
by Jun Rentschler & Morgan Bazilian - 915-935 The power of public bureaucracies: forest-related climate change policies in Bangladesh (1992–2014)
by Md Saifur Rahman & Lukas Giessen
August 2017, Volume 17, Issue 6
- 687-707 REDD+ finance: policy making in the context of fragmented institutions
by Mareike Well & Astrid Carrapatoso - 708-730 REDD+, transformational change and the promise of performance-based payments: a qualitative comparative analysis
by Maria Brockhaus & Kaisa Korhonen-Kurki & Jenniver Sehring & Monica Di Gregorio & Samuel Assembe-Mvondo & Andrea Babon & Melaku Bekele & Maria Fernanda Gebara & Dil Bahadur Khatri & Hermann Kambire & Felicien Kengoum & Demetrius Kweka & Mary Menton & Moira Moeliono & Naya Sharma Paudel & Thuy Thu Pham & Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo & Almeida Sitoe & Sven Wunder & Mathurin Zida - 731-763 Promoting small and medium forest enterprises in national REDD+ strategies: a global analysis of enabling environments
by Reem Hajjar & Olivia Sanchez Badini & Robert A. Kozak - 764-780 The framing of international competitiveness in Canada’s climate change policy: trade-off or synergy?
by David J. Blair - 781-800 Managing the costs of CO abatement in the cement industry
by Johan Rootzén & Filip Johnsson - 801-813 Rebound policy in the Paris Agreement: instrument comparison and climate-club revenue offsets
by Jeroen C. J. M. van den Bergh - 814-816 Will leading by example help in mitigating climate change? A comment on ‘the economics of leadership in climate change mitigation’ by Gregor Schwerhoff
by Yaniv Reingewertz - 817-818 Response to the comment on: ‘The economics of leadership in climate change mitigation’
by Gregor Schwerhoff
July 2017, Volume 17, Issue 5
- 1-1 Erratum
by The Editors - 551-572 Constraining and enabling factors to using long-term climate information in decision-making
by Lindsey Jones & Clara Champalle & Sabrina Chesterman & Laura Cramer & Todd A. Crane - 573-590 A synthesis of unilateral approaches to mitigating emissions leakage under incomplete policies
by D. Rajagopal - 591-615 Determinants of CO emission for post-Soviet Union independent countries
by Jeong Hwan Bae & Dmitriy D. Li & Meenakshi Rishi - 616-633 Applying personal carbon trading: a proposed ‘Carbon, Health and Savings System’ for British Columbia, Canada
by L. I. Guzman & A. Clapp - 634-649 Global climate policy and deep decarbonization of energy-intensive industries
by Max Åhman & Lars J. Nilsson & Bengt Johansson - 650-663 Landscape for change? International climate policy and energy transitions: evidence from sub-Saharan Africa
by Peter Newell & Harriet Bulkeley - 664-677 The Regensburg Model: reference values for the (I)NDCs based on converging per capita emissions
by Manfred Sargl & Andreas Wolfsteiner & Günter Wittmann - 678-686 Banning incandescent light bulbs in the shadow of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme
by Grischa Perino & Thomas Pioch
May 2017, Volume 17, Issue 4
- 1-1 Corrigendum
by The Editors - 401-422 Interprovincial allocation of China's national carbon emission allowance: an uncertainty analysis based on Monte-Carlo simulations
by Bin Ye & Jingjing Jiang & Lixin Miao & Dejun Xie - 423-442 China's changing economy: implications for its carbon dioxide emissions
by Fergus Green & Nicholas Stern - 443-457 Identifying the industrial sectors at risk of carbon leakage in China
by Xin Wang & Fei Teng & Shaojie Zhou & Bofeng Cai - 458-469 Exploring linkages among China's 2030 climate targets
by Xin Wang & Shuwei Zhang - 470-475 Coal chemicals: China's high-carbon clean coal programme?
by Chi-Jen Yang - 476-484 The prospect of engaging China in the ICAO global MBM scheme
by Yitian Huang - 485-500 Multi-level governance and climate change mitigation in New Zealand: lost opportunities
by Julia Harker & Prue Taylor & Stephen Knight-Lenihan - 501-515 Comparing emissions mitigation efforts across countries
by Joseph E. Aldy & William A. Pizer & Keigo Akimoto - 516-532 Innovating in sub-national climate policy: the mandatory emissions reduction scheme in Tokyo
by Hitomi Roppongi & Aki Suwa & Jose A. Puppim De Oliveira - 533-550 Stakeholder perceptions of event attribution in the loss and damage debate
by Hannah R. Parker & Emily Boyd & Rosalind J. Cornforth & Rachel James & Friederike E. L. Otto & Myles R. Allen
April 2017, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 261-279 Solidarity in transboundary flood risk management: A view from the Dutch North Rhine–Westphalian catchment area
by Marjolein C.J. Van Eerd & Mark A. Wiering & Carel Dieperink - 280-298 Investing in low-carbon transitions: energy finance as an adaptive market
by Stephen Hall & Timothy J Foxon & Ronan Bolton - 299-313 Understanding the case for low-carbon investment through bottom-up assessments of city-scale opportunities
by Andrew Heshedahl Sudmant & Andy Gouldson & Sarah Colenbrander & Rory Sullivan & Faye McAnulla & Niall Kerr - 314-329 The impact of administrative transaction costs in the EU emissions trading system
by Peter Heindl - 330-345 Using the social cost of carbon to value earth observing systems
by Roger Cooke & Alexander Golub & Bruce A. Wielicki & David F. Young & Martin G. Mlynczak & Rosemary R. Baize - 346-360 Understanding carbon trading: Effects of delegating CO responsibility on organizations’ trading behaviour
by Juan Miguel Rodriguez Lopez & Anita Engels & Lisa Knoll - 361-377 Impact of justice and solidarity variables on the acceptability of managed realignment
by Bénédicte Rulleau & Hélène Rey-Valette & Valérie Clément - 378-396 Assessing the impact of a carbon tax in Ukraine
by Miriam Frey - 397-400 Combating climate change, by the books: Why are we waiting? The logic, urgency, and promise of tackling climate change/This changes everything: Capitalism vs. the climate
by Frank Ackerman
February 2017, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 111-112 A new era for climate policy
by Frank Jotzo & Harald Winkler & Joanna Depledge - 113-130 Russia's 2020 GHG emissions target: Emission trends and implementation
by Anna Korppoo & Alexey Kokorin - 131-149 Non-state governance and climate policy: the fossil fuel divestment movement
by Julie Ayling & Neil Gunningham - 150-170 UNFCCC before and after Paris – what's necessary for an effective climate regime?
by Lukas Hermwille & Wolfgang Obergassel & Hermann E. Ott & Christiane Beuermann - 171-188 Stakeholder participation in CDM and new climate mitigation mechanisms: China CDM case study
by Yan Dong & Karen Holm Olsen - 189-202 Identifying climate services needs for national planning: insights from Malawi
by Katharine Vincent & Andrew J. Dougill & Jami L. Dixon & Lindsay C. Stringer & Tracy Cull - 203-212 Assessing progress in MRV capacity development: experience with a scorecard approach
by Till Neeff & Zoltán Somogyi & Corinna Schultheis & Esther Mertens & Joachim Rock & Johannes Brötz & Karsten Dunger & Katja Oehmichen & Sandro Federici - 213-230 The polarization of public concern about climate change in Norway
by Marianne Aasen - 231-245 An ‘equal effort’ approach to assessing the North–South climate finance gap
by Alex Bowen & Emanuele Campiglio & Sara Herreras Martinez - 246-260 US institutional pathways to clean coal and shale gas: lessons for China
by Christian Downie & Peter Drahos
January 2017, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-8 Climate policy after the Paris 2015 climate conference
by Jorge E. Viñuales & Joanna Depledge & David M. Reiner & Emma Lees - 9-15 Climate change after Paris: from turning point to transformation
by Richard Kinley - 16-32 The Paris Agreement: resolving the inconsistency between global goals and national contributions
by Niklas Höhne & Takeshi Kuramochi & Carsten Warnecke & Frauke Röser & Hanna Fekete & Markus Hagemann & Thomas Day & Ritika Tewari & Marie Kurdziel & Sebastian Sterl & Sofia Gonzales - 33-47 Precaution and post-caution in the Paris Agreement: adaptation, loss and damage and finance
by Anju Sharma - 48-58 The Paris Agreement: China’s ‘New Normal’ role in international climate negotiations
by Isabel Hilton & Oliver Kerr - 59-70 Responsibility and liability for climate loss and damage after Paris
by Emma Lees - 71-85 Small group, big impact: how AILAC helped shape the Paris Agreement
by Guy Edwards & Isabel Cavelier Adarve & María Camila Bustos & J. Timmons Roberts - 86-101 US-proofing the Paris Climate Agreement
by Luke Kemp - 102-110 Global trade and promotion of cleantech industry: a post-Paris agenda
by John A. Mathews
June 2017, Volume 17, Issue 0
- 1-7 Policy instruments for low-carbon development based on work from the EUFP7 project, CECILIA2050
by Paul Ekins & Paul Drummond & Benjamin Görlach - 8-31 Strategic design of long-term climate policy instrumentations, with exemplary EU focus
by Gjalt Huppes & Sebastiaan Deetman & Ruben Huele & René Kleijn & Arjan De Koning & Ester van der Voet - 32-50 Ambitious climate policy through centralization? Evidence from the European Union
by Camilla Bausch & Benjamin Görlach & Michael Mehling - 51-71 Cost-effective decarbonization in the EU: an overview of policy suitability
by Paul Drummond & Paul Ekins - 72-92 Seeking optimality in climate change agri-food policies: stakeholder perspectives from Western Europe
by Agni Kalfagianni & Onno Kuik - 93-110 Decarbonizing the EU energy system by 2050: an important role for BECCS
by Baltazar Solano Rodriguez & Paul Drummond & Paul Ekins - 111-130 Public acceptability of climate change mitigation policies: a discrete choice experiment
by Milan Ščasný & Iva Zvěřinová & Mikolaj Czajkowski & Eva Kyselá & Katarzyna Zagórska - 131-147 Financial barriers and environmental innovations: evidence from EU manufacturing firms
by Claudia Ghisetti & Susanna Mancinelli & Massimiliano Mazzanti & Mariangela Zoli - 148-169 Industrial and terrestrial carbon leakage under climate policy fragmentation
by Mikel González-Eguino & Iñigo Capellán-Pérez & Iñaki Arto & Alberto Ansuategi & Anil Markandya
June 2016, Volume 16, Issue sup1
- 1-6 The Deep Decarbonization Pathways Project (DDPP): insights and emerging issues
by Chris Bataille & Henri Waisman & Michel Colombier & Laura Segafredo & Jim Williams - 7-26 The need for national deep decarbonization pathways for effective climate policy
by Chris Bataille & Henri Waisman & Michel Colombier & Laura Segafredo & Jim Williams & Frank Jotzo - 27-46 Improving deep decarbonization modelling capacity for developed and developing country contexts
by Steve Pye & Chris Bataille - 47-62 Uncertainty management and the dynamic adjustment of deep decarbonization pathways
by Sandrine Mathy & Patrick Criqui & Katharina Knoop & Manfred Fischedick & Sascha Samadi - 63-77 Assessing decarbonization pathways and their implications for energy security policies in Japan
by Ken Oshiro & Mikiko Kainuma & Toshihiko Masui - 78-91 Achieving development and mitigation objectives through a decarbonization development pathway in South Africa
by Katye E. Altieri & Hilton Trollip & Tara Caetano & Alison Hughes & Bruno Merven & Harald Winkler - 92-109 Exploring national decarbonization pathways and global energy trade flows: a multi-scale analysis
by Steve Pye & Christophe McGlade & Chris Bataille & Gabrial Anandarajah & Amandine Denis-Ryan & Vladimir Potashnikov - 110-128 Managing carbon-intensive materials in a decarbonizing world without a global price on carbon
by Amandine Denis-Ryan & Chris Bataille & Frank Jotzo
November 2016, Volume 16, Issue 8
- 1-1 Editorial Board
by The Editors - 953-955 One farewell and many welcomes
by Michael Grubb - 956-972 Facilitating linkage of climate policies through the Paris outcome
by Daniel M. Bodansky & Seth A. Hoedl & Gilbert E. Metcalf & Robert N. Stavins - 973-992 Challenges in developing effective policy for soil carbon sequestration: perspectives on additionality, leakage, and permanence
by Tas Thamo & David J. Pannell - 993-1010 Reaching a climate agreement: compensating for energy market effects of climate policy
by Sonja Peterson & Matthias Weitzel - 1011-1028 Bypassing the ‘ratification straitjacket’: reviewing US legal participation in a climate agreement
by Luke Kemp - 1029-1047 Comparative assessment of Japan's long-term carbon budget under different effort-sharing principles
by Takeshi Kuramochi & Jusen Asuka & Hanna Fekete & Kentaro Tamura & Niklas Höhne - 1048-1064 The socialization potential of the CDM in EU–Vietnam climate relations
by David Belis & Bart Kerremans - 1065-1084 Factors driving international technology transfer: empirical insights from a CDM project survey
by Carsten Gandenberger & Miriam Bodenheimer & Joachim Schleich & Robert Orzanna & Lioba Macht
October 2016, Volume 16, Issue 7
- 815-835 Cap setting and allowance allocation in China's emissions trading pilot programmes: special issues and innovative solutions
by Tao Pang & Maosheng Duan - 836-854 Improving technology transfer through national systems of innovation: climate relevant innovation-system builders (CRIBs)
by David Ockwell & Rob Byrne - 855-876 What explains public support for climate policies? A review of empirical and experimental studies
by Stefan Drews & Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh - 877-893 Modelling long-term HFC emissions from India's residential air-conditioning sector: exploring implications of alternative refrigerants, best practices, and a sustainable lifestyle within an integrated assessment modelling framework
by Vaibhav Chaturvedi & Mohit Sharma - 894-908 Engaging communities in climate adaptation: the potential of social networks
by Rebecca Cunningham & Christopher Cvitanovic & Thomas Measham & Brent Jacobs & Anne-Maree Dowd & Ben Harman - 909-923 Benefit cost analysis, resilience and climate change
by Stephen Knight-Lenihan - 924-939 Indigenous community benefits from a de-centralized approach to REDD+ in Brazil
by Thales A. P. West - 940-951 Global climate policy and local energy politics: is India hiding behind the poor?
by Mark Daniel Jaeger & Katharina Michaelowa
August 2016, Volume 16, Issue 6
- 1-1 Corrigendum
by The Editors - 673-681 Full legal compliance with the Kyoto Protocol’s first commitment period – some lessons
by Michael Grubb - 682-702 The nexus approach to water–energy–food security: an option for adaptation to climate change
by Golam Rasul & Bikash Sharma - 703-731 Review of the experience with monitoring uncertainty requirements in the Clean Development Mechanism
by Igor Shishlov & Valentin Bellassen - 732-751 Using carbon finance to support climate policy objectives in high mountain ecosystems
by Adrian Ward & Paul Dargusch & Giorgio Grussu & Rosalaura Romeo - 752-767 Proposal for a poverty-adaptation-mitigation window within the Green Climate Fund
by Sandrine Mathy & Odile Blanchard - 768-782 Compliance of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol in the first commitment period
by Igor Shishlov & Romain Morel & Valentin Bellassen - 783-791 Who determines transformational change in development and climate finance?
by Harald Winkler & Navroz K. Dubash - 792-802 Helping eco-labels to fulfil their promises
by Gilles Grolleau & Lisette Ibanez & Naoufel Mzoughi & Mario Teisl - 803-813 Energy research within the UNFCCC: a proposal to guard against ongoing climate-deadlock
by Barry W. Brook & Kingsley Edney & Rafaela Hillerbrand & Rasmus Karlsson & Jonathan Symons
July 2016, Volume 16, Issue 5
- 543-547 European energy governance and decarbonization policy: learning from the 2020 strategy
by Kacper Szulecki - 548-567 Shaping the ‘Energy Union': between national positions and governance innovation in EU energy and climate policy
by Kacper Szulecki & Severin Fischer & Anne Therese Gullberg & Oliver Sartor - 568-585 Situational analysis of EU renewable energy legislation
by Tomas Wyns & Arianna Khatchadourian - 586-605 An offshore wind union? Diversity and convergence in European offshore wind governance
by Oscar Fitch-Roy - 606-621 Sharing the gains from EU--Western Balkan renewable electricity cooperation
by Dorian Frieden & Andreas Tuerk & Mak Đukan & André Ortner & Johan Lilliestam - 622-641 Nuclear energy and path dependence in Europe’s ‘Energy union’: coherence or continued divergence?
by Andrew Lawrence & Benjamin Sovacool & Andrew Stirling - 642-657 Varieties of capitalism and clean energy transitions in the European Union: When renewable energy hits different economic logics
by Stefan Ćetković & Aron Buzogány - 658-672 Assessment of the EU 10% interconnection target in the context of CO 2 mitigation
by András Mezősi & Zsuzsanna Pató & László Szabó
May 2016, Volume 16, Issue 4
- 393-414 GDP and employment effects of policies to close the 2020 emissions gap
by Terry Barker & Eva Alexandri & Jean-Francois Mercure & Yuki Ogawa & Hector Pollitt - 415-433 Policy without politics: technocratic control of climate change adaptation policy making in Nepal
by Hemant R. Ojha & Sharad Ghimire & Adam Pain & Andrea Nightingale & Dil B. Khatri & Hari Dhungana - 434-455 Aligning emissions trading and feed-in tariffs in China
by Wenbin Lin & Alun Gu & Xin Wang & Bin Liu - 456-473 Can CDM finance energy access in Least Developed Countries? Evidence from Tanzania
by Benjamin T. Wood & Susannah M. Sallu & Jouni Paavola - 474-495 Transfer patterns in Phase I of the EU Emissions Trading System: a first reality check based on cluster analysis
by Regina A. Betz & Tobias S. Schmidt - 496-521 The tools of climate adaptation policy: analysing instruments and instrument selection
by Daniel Henstra - 522-541 GHG mitigation of agricultural peatlands requires coherent policies
by Kristiina Regina & Arif Budiman & Mogens H. Greve & Arne Grønlund & Åsa Kasimir & Heikki Lehtonen & Søren O. Petersen & Pete Smith & Henk Wösten
April 2016, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 253-283 Health and environmental co-benefits and conflicts of actions to meet UK carbon targets
by Alison C. Smith & Michael Holland & Outi Korkeala & Jamie Warmington & Daniel Forster & Helen ApSimon & Tim Oxley & Roald Dickens & Stephen M. Smith - 284-300 Linkage of greenhouse gas emissions trading systems: learning from experience
by Matthew Ranson & Robert N. Stavins - 301-317 Scenarios for a 2 °C world: a trade-linked input--output model with high sector detail
by Arjan De Koning & Gjalt Huppes & Sebastiaan Deetman & Arnold Tukker - 318-331 Do international factors influence the passage of climate change legislation?
by Samuel Fankhauser & Caterina Gennaioli & Murray Collins - 332-352 Climate change mitigation scenarios and policies and measures: the case of Kazakhstan
by Aiymgul Kerimray & Kanat Baigarin & Rocco De Miglio & Giancarlo Tosato - 353-371 Controlling GHG emissions from the transportation sector through an ETS: institutional arrangements in Shenzhen, China
by Jingjing Jiang & Bin Ye & Xiaoming Ma & Lixin Miao - 372-392 Inclusive approaches to urban climate adaptation planning and implementation in the Global South
by Eric Chu & Isabelle Anguelovski & JoAnn Carmin
March 2016, Volume 16, Issue 2
- 125-144 Free allocation in the 3rd EU ETS period: assessing two manufacturing sectors
by Christian Stenqvist & Max Åhman - 145-164 Climate policy strength compared: China, the US, the EU, India, Russia, and Japan
by Hugh Compston & Ian Bailey - 165-177 Green growth and climate change: conceptual and empirical considerations
by Miklós Antal & Jeroen C.J.M. Van Den Bergh - 178-195 Promoting green industrial development through local content requirements: India's National Solar Mission
by Oliver Johnson - 196-214 The economics of leadership in climate change mitigation
by Gregor Schwerhoff - 215-236 Integrating agriculture and energy to assess GHG emissions reduction: a methodological approach
by Alessandro Chiodi & Trevor Donnellan & James Breen & Paul Deane & Kevin Hanrahan & Maurizio Gargiulo & Brian P. Ó Gallachóir - 237-252 Narrowing gaps between research and policy development in climate change adaptation work in the water resources and agriculture sectors of Cambodia
by Va Dany & Bhishna Bajracharya & Louis Lebel & Michael Regan & Ros Taplin
January 2016, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-25 After monetary policy, climate policy: is delegation the key to EU ETS reform?
by G. Grosjean & W. Acworth & C. Flachsland & R. Marschinski - 26-49 The (ir)relevance of transaction costs in climate policy instrument choice: an analysis of the EU and the US
by Fabian Joas & Christian Flachsland - 50-67 Citizens' perceptions of justice in international climate policy: an empirical analysis
by Joachim Schleich & Elisabeth Dütschke & Claudia Schwirplies & Andreas Ziegler