Categories

Environmental Problems and Policies

AuthorW E John
PublisherArise Pub
Publisher2008
Publisherviii
Publisher296 p,
Publishertables, figs
ISBN8189937041

Contents: Preface. 1. Political economy of the Kyoto Protocol. 2. Bartering: biodiversity. 3. Environment and public finance. 4. Water pollution, abstraction and economic instruments. 5. Agri-Environmental Policy. 6. Transport and the environment. 7. Sea-level rise and the North Sea. 8. Risk and imagining alternative futures. 9. Social visions of future sustainable societies. 10. Coordination of environmental policies. Appendix: First generation global models.

"The so-called greenhouse gases include no only Carbon Dioxide (CO2), but also methane, nitrous oxide, fluorocarbons (including hydro-fluorocarbons and perfluorocarbons), troposphere ozone (precursors of which include nitrogen oxides, non-methane hydrocarbons, and carbon monoxide), and sulphur hexafluoride. However, CO2 accounts for the bulk of aggregate warming potential and, mainly for this reason, the policy debate has focused on the extent to which emissions of this gas should be limited. In 1988, a semi-political conference held in Toronto recommended that, as a first step, CO2 emissions should be reduced 20 per cent from the1988 level by 2005. This so-called \'Toronoto Target\' was arbitrary, but the idea that countries should commit to meeting a target for emission reduction (as opposed to, say, a carbon tax or a technology standard) has endured. It is perhaps the most important feature of the Kyoto Protocol." (jacket)

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