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Nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMAs) in developing countries: challenges and opportunities
Institute of Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, 2010Nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMAs) were introduced by the Bali Action Plan in 2007 and they have since been interpreted in various ways by different countries and country groupings. A key question for the talks on NAMAs at the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference in 2009 and beyond is whether the different positions can be reconciled.DocumentLow carbon growth country studies – getting started: experience from six countries
Energy Sector Management Assistance Programme [World Bank / UNDP], 2009This document is a review of the low carbon growth studies conducted in six emerging economies: Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico and South Africa. These countries, with the help of the Energy Sector Management Assistance Programme (ESMAP), have initiated country specific studies to assess development goals in conjunction with greenhouse gas mitigation opportunities.DocumentIDLO-CISDL compendium of legal best practices on climate change policy
International Development Law Organisation, 2011This paper highlights the challenges that governments face in implementing their international climate change policy commitments and the means to addressing these challenges. The authors note that international action on climate change is a relatively new phenomenon and legal systems were designed prior to the establishment of the multilateral climate change regime.DocumentThe ICT Landscape in BRICS Countries: Brazil, India, China
Directorate-General for Research - European Commission, 2012BRIC countires are becoming major players as producers of ICT goods and services.The aim of this report is to take a closer look at the ICTs landscape in BRICS countries Brazil, India and China. It documents the size of the ICT sector for each of the three countries covered and assesses their R&D expenditures.DocumentDeveloping Countries' Trade Vulnerabilities to EU Climate Policies
International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development, 2011The European Union (EU) aims to take a lead in combating climate change and, as such, experiences a higher intensity of carbon leakage and competitiveness concerns. The EU is, however, an important export market for many developing countries, and BCAs implemented by the EU could therefore have a large impact on these countries.DocumentInvestment-Grade Climate Change Policy: Financing the Transition to the Low-Carbon Economy
2011The report has two objectives: (1) to contribute to policymakers' understanding of the factors that institutional investors consider when investing in low-carbon growth areas such as renewable energy and energy efficiency, and (2) to set out what institutional investors see as 'investment-grade' climate change and clean energy policy that would support significant low-carbon, clean energy investmeDocumentSkills for Green Jobs: A Global View
International Labour Organization, 2011This volume examines the experiences of 21 developed and developing countries in adjusting their training provision to meet the new demands of a greener economy. It shows that skills development is critical to unlocking the employment potential of green growth, yet skills shortages are becoming an obstacle in realising this potential.DocumentJoint statement issued at the conclusion of the fifth BASIC ministerial meeting on climate change
Ministry of Environment and Forests, India, 2010The Fifth BASIC Ministerial meeting on climate change was held in Tianjin, China, on the 10th and 11th of October 2010. This joint statement was issued at its conclusion. It reemphasizes the primacy of equity in international climate negotiations.DocumentJoint statement issued at the conclusion of the fourth meeting of ministers of the BASIC group
Ministry of Environment and Forests, India, 2010This joint statement was issued by BASIC countries at the fourth meeting of BASIC country Ministers on climate change that took place in Rio de Janeiro on the 25th and 26th of July 2010.DocumentChina, India, South Africa, Brazil (BASIC): Crucial for the global environment. Commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment
ECON Pöyry, 2011This study, commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry of Environment, aims to assess why and how the BASIC countries (Brazil, South Africa, India, and China) are important for the global environment. The study shall also provide an overview of environmental policy in the BASIC countries.Pages
