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Searching with a thematic focus on Environment trade policy, Trade Policy
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China's regional carbon emissions change over 1997-2007
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2010The increased demand for energy in China has generated concomitant increase of carbon emissions, which poses an unprecedented challenge to China’s, and even global, sustainable development. In this paper, from the perspective of provincial carbon emissions, the authors analyse China’s carbon emissions changes during 1997-2007 based on the index decomposition analysis method.DocumentAn analysis on statistical indicators and methodology of environmental investments in China
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2006The environmental investment is an important guarantee for materialising the basic national policy of environmental protection and implementing the sustainable development strategy.DocumentEmpirical experiences of green national accounting in China
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2007The severity of the environmental problem in China is not only reflected by the increasing amount of pollution, the widening range of ecological destructionand the striking conflict between supply and demand of resources, but also represented by the interaction among resources, environment and social economic development.DocumentExploring and developing environmental economic policies for China in the new era
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2010The environmental economic policies are mechanisms and regimes that regulate and influence people’s behaviors of making or eliminating pollution and ecological degradation aiming at socio-economic sustainable development by employing such economic leverages as financing, taxation, pricing, credit, investment, and market instruments based on the theories of environmental economics and markDocumentInteraction between trade and environmental policies with special interest politics
Institute of Economic Growth, India, 2007The basic tenets of economics view that an effective rule-based system of multilateral trade and investment is welfare improving because it achieves economic integration by utilizing the principles of competitiveness and comparative advantage.DocumentNatural resources, the environment and conflict
African Centre for Constructive Resolution of Disputes, 2011This report emanates from an exploratory study conducted in 2009 by the African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD), in collaboration with the Madariaga-College of Europe Foundation.DocumentBrazilian economy: recent evolution and new perspectives for South-South cooperation
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2007Brazilian economic stagnation of the early 1980s mirrors that of the other Latin American countries. Thus, comparison on the economic data for the whole of Latin America from 1980 up to today and those of the 1950-1980 period, reveals that investment rates are substantially lower; unemployment is higher; and the average income of salaried workers is lower.DocumentBiosafety protocol, precautionary approach and trade: identifying plausible policy options
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2005The Rio 1992 Summit adopted various instruments for translating the principles of Agenda 21 into reality including the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). As part of its mandate the CBD led to the adoption of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety in the year 2000.DocumentTrade and climate change: the environment from developmental and economic perspective in Southern African Development Community (SADC)
Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies, South Africa, 2010There is an increased recognition that actions to address climate change and the environment are intimately linked to economic growth and sustainable development goals and needs.DocumentMarket challenges for the restoration of the environment
Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies, South Africa, 2012Over the past century South Africa has become increasingly reliant on the manufacturing and services industries for its economic development and growth. However, the natural environment continues to play an important role in the livelihoods of particularly the poor, those in rural areas and the agriculture sector – the latter being essential for urban living.Pages
