Greek Islanders To Be Nominated For Nobel Peace Prize
January 26, 2016 3 min. read

On remote Greek islands, grandmothers have sung terrified little babies to sleep, while teachers, pensioners and students have spent months offering food, shelter, clothing and comfort to refugees who have risked their lives to flee war and terror.

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Climate Talks
June 14, 2010 3 min. read

We are six months out from Copenhagen and further talks in Bonn, where the UNFCCC is headquartered, have just concluded.  The release from the UNFCCC says the recent talks made “progress on fleshing out specifics” for a global climate change regime.  There were 5,500 participants, including government delegates from over 180 countries, and reps from […]

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Meetings and Progress – after Copenhagen
April 10, 2010 2 min. read

So now it’s four months after the meetings in Copenhagen.  I’m in the group who thinks that more was accomplished than meets the eye and that it was an important way station to achieving more international agreement on stemming the tide of greenhouse gases we confront and adapting to the massive impacts they’ve already caused […]

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Finance – Post-Copenhagen (and Gordon Brown Takes on the Denialists Again)
February 13, 2010 3 min. read

There was, of course, a lot of coverage from me, and much of the rest of the world it seems, on the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP15) in Copenhagen in December – before, during and since.  One of the critical agreements to come out of the conference was on finance.  Pledges were made by […]

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Two Good Reads
January 31, 2010 3 min. read

I had a very busy end of the week and now I’m out of town, so I haven’t been reporting.  Here, however, are two pretty interesting reads for you, from two of my favorite writers. The first is from Fiona Harvey, indefatigable environmental correspondent for the FT.   She has some unkind words for some of […]

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China, Climate and Trade
January 2, 2010 4 min. read

If you know me or have been reading this blog with any regularity, you know I’m a skeptic.  Not about climate change but about China.  I made an analysis several years back that, in retrospect, seems mistaken.  I perceived that the economic and political pressures of the liberal democracies would push and pull China toward […]

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Post-Copenhagen Coverage
December 23, 2009 2 min. read

There is a blockbuster piece at Salon.com that looks at Five common mistakes in the coverage of the Copenhagen Accord.  It punctures some of the fallacies that have abounded in some quarters such as that there could have been a better Accord voted on by the delegates, that the smaller developing nations rejected the Accord, […]

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Of Copenhagen and the Trials of International Consensus
December 21, 2009 4 min. read

The impact of the global financial crisis creates an illusion that there are real prospects for effective co-operation to reach long-term global goals. Despite China’s immaculate hosting of the Olympic Games and its inevitable rise to the global negotiation tables as a key decision-maker, reality forces her to come to terms with her own pressing […]

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Copenhagen Should Not Surprise
December 20, 2009 4 min. read

Everyone seems shocked and discouraged by the outcome in Copenhagen. They shouldn’t be. We must control emissions. So why wasn’t there a deal that made everyone happy? Because that’s the nature of multilateral negotiations, with scores of parties with scores of interests. They are always, always like this, as anyone who has studied them knows: […]

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"The Copenhagen Accord"
December 19, 2009 2 min. read

This is the document that has taken many years and much blood, sweat, tears and toil from thousands of people to produce.  Yvo de Boer, head of the UNFCCC, described the accord as “politically important.” It provides an “architecture for a response to climate change.” The “LA Times” had this story this morning:  Climate summit ends […]

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First Cut on the Deal
December 19, 2009 1 min. read

AP had this late tonight.  The deal “…requires industrial countries to list their individual targets and developing countries to list the actions they will take to cut global warming pollution by specific amounts. Obama called that an ‘unprecedented breakthrough.’”  AP further reported “German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a leading proponent of strong action to confront global […]

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Lula: Making the Case at Copenhagen
December 18, 2009 4 min. read

President Lula made his case for greenhouse gas emissions reductions at the UNFCCC fifteenth Conference of the Parties (COP15) at Copenhagen. In an open letter published in the Christian Science Monitor, Lula admonished, “It is beyond doubt that both the benefits of economic development as well as the costs of environmental degradation over the past […]

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