Practical information
Registration for this event is now closed.
Find out more about our donor programsSession organized by the CSIS (Center for Strategic & International Studies) and Ifri. Introduction by David Pumphrey, Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, CSIS, with Barbara Buchner, Senior Energy and Environment Analyst, International Energy Agency, Maïté Jaureguy-Naudin, Program Manager, Energy Program, Ifri, Graeme Martin, Manager of Business Development, Environmental Products, Shell Energy North America, Kjell Olav Kristiansen, Director, Advisory Serrvices, Point Carbon. William C. Ramsay, Senior Fellow et Director, Programme Energie, Ifri.
As the U.S. Congress considers proposed climate legislation and debates the merits and complications of a nationawide cap and trade program to reduce green house gas emission, experience under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) is useful to inform decisions regarding how to craft a well designed US cap & trade market. European policymakers and firms grappled with the questions of effective cap setting, price volatility, and cost uncertainty during the first 5 year implementation period of the EU ETS and several useful lessons can be drawn from that experience. The European experience also offers insights about the effects on innovation in carbon abatement technologies.
The purpose of this session is to explore some of the lessons learned from the EU ETS experience and discuss how those insights can help U.S. policymakers design a more effective cap and trade system. In light of the upcoming UN climate negotiations in Copenhagen, speakers will also discuss ways for emerging economies to reduce CO2 emissions through carbon markets, in particular regarding offset mechanisms and sectorial approches.
Speakers
Other events
Navigating War, Reforms, and Secure Future: Ukraine’s EU and NATO Accession Path
Exclusive conve
Lunch debate with Winston Peters, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of New Zealand
Discussion co-chaired by Thierry de Montbrial, Executive Chairman of Ifri, member of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, and Marc Hecker, Deputy Director of Ifri (in English without translation).
Shaping Europe’s Technological Sovereignty
In the wake of Donald Trump's re-election in the United States, Europeans face a crucial imperative: rethinking their sovereigny, especially in the technological realm. What will be the strategic priorities and action levers of the new European Commission on this issue? What assessment can we make of the previous Commission’s achievements and challenges in navigating Sino-American technological competition, transatlantic dependencies, and emerging global partnerships?