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Adapting to the Effects of Global Warming. Article from "RAMSES 2016"

Date de publication
08 September 2015
Accroche

Adaptation issues started to gain momentum from the Copenhagen conference in 2009. Up until then, international negotiations had focused on mitigation policies. However, the increase in weather events and the inadequate efforts to hold back global warming now make adaptation a key issue in discussions around the Paris agreement.

Image de couverture de la publication
RAMSES 2016

RAMSES 2016. Climat : une nouvelle chance ?

Date de publication
08 September 2015
Accroche

Written by Ifri's research team and its network of associates, the new RAMSES 2016 analyses geopolitics on a worldwide scale. The major theme of this 34th edition is Climate: A new chance? In addition, RAMSES 2016 tackles the insertion of Africa in globalization and the uncertainties of democracy today in post-industrial societies, but also in the South.

The Paris Agreement. Article from "RAMSES 2016"

Date de publication
08 September 2015
Accroche

To avoid the pitfalls of historic divisions, climate negotiators decided to go down the self-differentiation route and leave legal matters to be resolved during the last steps of the process. The national contributions drafted by each party provide a robust basis for discussion, but we still need to ensure that these are appropriate and also monitor their implementation. The credibility of the Paris Agreement will be determined by these final procedural trade-offs.  

Looking Ahead to COP21: What Korea has done and what Korea should do

Date de publication
10 June 2015
Accroche

Korea is the world’s 14th largest economy but the 8th largest emitter of CO2 as of 2013, due largely to an energy-intensive industry structure. Although it has continuously reduced its dependency on petroleum since it introduced the Energy Master Plan in 2008, the relative portion of non-fossil fuel sources, such as renewable energy, is still marginal at best (representing less than 10 percent of the total energy portfolio). In particular, it is difficult for Korea to increase the portion of renewables for various reasons. In this context, Korea has tried to find an adequate role in fighting against climate change.

COP21: What Are the Odds for Success?

Date de publication
01 June 2015
Accroche

Since Copenhagen, negotiations have been in stalemate. Progress can only be made if there is a significant attempt to create a transnational carbon market. 

Japan's Energy and Climate Policy: Towards Dispelling the Uncertainties

Date de publication
28 May 2015
Accroche

Four years after the Great East Japan Earthquake and a few months before the opening of the Paris Climate Conference, Japan is about to clarify its energy and climate policy.

Image principale

China's Coming of Age on Climate Change: Just in time for Paris?

Date de publication
19 May 2015
Accroche

The upcoming Paris climate conference (COP21) is opening the door to a new post-2020 climate regime in which China and other large emitters will have to provide strong evidence of their domestic efforts in addressing global warming in the next century.

Road to Paris: What Would Be a Successful Outcome for COP21?

Date de publication
09 April 2015
Accroche

Eight months before the opening of the Paris climate conference (COP21), it can be reasonably argued that a global climate agreement is now within reach.

From 2020 to 2030, from Copenhagen to Paris: a mindset change for the European Climate Policy?

Date de publication
08 December 2014
Accroche

The European Councils of March 2007 and October 2014 have defined the major guidelines of the European climate policy for the 2010-2020 and 2020-2030 decades. These commitments have then been used as negotiation roadmaps for two major conferences on climate held under the United-Nations umbrella, in Copenhagen in 2009 and in Paris in December 2015. In both cases, the aim was, and still is, to reach a global agreement to take over the Kyoto Protocol. The first one was a failure for the European diplomacy and all hopes are now placed in the second, which may well be the last chance for the international climate talks.

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Ramses Conference, 2024