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Is the Asia-Pacific Partnership a viable alternative to Kyoto?

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 05:28 authored by Aynsley KellowAynsley Kellow
The Kyoto Protocol has failed: horizontally because it failed to secure commitments from important players; vertically because of the lack of delivery of outcomes among those who did accede to it. The Asia‐Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate represents a useful way forward, both as a non‐treaty agreement that contains a promising non‐binding sectoral approach to minimizing emissions by seven parties accounting for more than half global emissions, and as an exercise in ‘minilateralism’ where understanding can develop among the key players. It has provided an important building block upon which to build other initiatives, such as the Major Economies Meeting of the US Bush administration and now the Major Economies Forum of the Obama administration. These arenas with 17 members offer opportunities not possible in full multilateral arenas such as Framework Convention on Climate Change, where sheer numbers simply slow processes and help produce lowest common denominator responses.

History

Publication title

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change

Pagination

10-15

ISSN

1757-7780

Department/School

School of Social Sciences

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

Place of publication

Chichester, United Kingdom

Rights statement

Copyright 2010John Wiley & Sons

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Justice and the law not elsewhere classified

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