Mind the climate policy gaps: climate change public policy and reality in Portugal, Spain and Morocco

被引:9
|
作者
Camargo, Joao [1 ]
Barcena, Inaki [2 ]
Soares, Pedro M. [3 ]
Schmidt, Luisa [1 ]
Andaluz, Javier [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lisbon, Inst Ciencias Sociais, Av Prof Anibal de Bettencourt 9, P-1600189 Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Univ Basque Country, Fac Ciencias Sociales & Comunicac, Bilbao, Spain
[3] Univ Lisbon, Fac Ciencias, Inst D Luiz, Lisbon, Portugal
[4] Dept Cambio Climat Ecologistas Acc, Madrid, Spain
关键词
Climate policy gap; Climate change policy-making; Public policy under-reaction; Portugal; Spain; Morocco; PRECIPITATION; SIMULATION; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1007/s10584-019-02646-9
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The IPCC 1.5 degrees C report argues for a 50% cut of global greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. Dangerous gaps lie between what is required to reach the 1.5 degrees C objective, what governments have pledged and what is happening in reality. Here, we develop 'climate policy gap' graphics for Portugal, Spain and Morocco to help reveal this divide and quantify the under-reaction between diagnosis and action, through layers of political intended and unintended miscommunication, insufficient action and the power of the fossil fuels industries. The climate policy gaps for the three nations reveal overshoots on even the most ambitious levels of emissions reductions pledged when compared with trajectories compatible with 1.5 degrees C or even 2 degrees C limits. This research suggests that there is a built-in feature of under-reaction in climate policy, which staves off any emission pathways compatible with stopping a temperature rise above 1.5 degrees C by 2100. It shows that the climate policy gap is a political and methodological tool that reveals systemic shortcomings of government climate action. Its visibility identifies benchmarks and sectors that should be activated to close these gaps in response to the growing popular demands for climate justice.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 169
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Climate change and the National Policy
    Ward, T
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS-REVUE CANADIENNE D ECONOMIQUE, 1996, 29 : S344 - S348
  • [32] Climate change policy: A survey
    Paterson, M
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS, 2004, 13 (02) : 482 - 488
  • [33] Madison and climate change policy
    Wiener, JB
    Stewart, RB
    Hammitt, JK
    Hourcade, JC
    SCIENCE, 2006, 311 (5759) : 335 - 336
  • [34] International Climate Change Policy
    Chan, Gabriel
    Stavins, Robert
    Ji, Zou
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF RESOURCE ECONOMICS, VOL 10, 2018, 10 : 335 - 360
  • [35] Sequential climate change policy
    Parson, Edward A.
    Karwat, Darshan
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2011, 2 (05) : 744 - 756
  • [36] Energy policy and climate change
    Jean-Baptiste, P
    Ducroux, R
    ENERGY POLICY, 2003, 31 (02) : 155 - 166
  • [37] TECHNOLOGY POLICY AND CLIMATE CHANGE
    Jaffe, Adam B.
    CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMICS, 2012, 3 (04)
  • [38] Transport Policy and Climate Change
    Short, Jack
    Van dender, Kurt
    Crist, Philippe
    REDUCING CLIMATE IMPACTS IN THE TRANSPORTATION SECTOR, 2009, : 35 - +
  • [39] CLIMATE-CHANGE POLICY
    LAVE, LB
    DOWLATABADI, H
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1993, 27 (10) : 1962 - 1972
  • [40] Climate Change Economics and Policy
    Fouquet, R.
    CLIMATE POLICY, 2001, 1 (04) : 521 - 523