Part |
Researcher |
Study |
I: Climate change: our approach (Chapters 1-2) |
John Broome (University of Oxford) |
Valuing policies in response to climate change: some ethical issues |
Cameron Hepburn (St Hugh’s College, University of Oxford) |
Discounting climate change damages |
II: Impacts of climate change on growth and development (Chapters 3-6) |
Rachel Warren and others (Tyndall Centre) |
Understanding the regional impacts of climate change (Tyndall Centre Working Paper 90) |
Rachel Warren and others (Tyndall Centre) |
Spotlighting the impacts functions in integrated assessments (Tyndall Centre Working Paper 91) |
Andrew Challinor and others(University of Reading) |
Indian Monsoon |
Nigel Arnell (University of Southampton) |
Global impacts of abrupt climate change: an initial assessment |
David Anthoff and others (Tyndall Centre) |
Global and regional exposure to large rises in sea-level: a sensitivity analysis (Tyndall Centre Working Paper 96) |
JC Nkomo and others |
The impacts of climate change in Africa:
Main report ,
Summary matrix |
Gustavo Nagy and others |
Understanding the potential impact of climate change and variability in Latin America and the Caribbean |
Joyashree Roy (Jadavpur University) |
The economics of climate change: a review of studies in the context of South Asia with a special focus on India |
Lin Erda and Zhou Ji |
Climate change impacts and its economics in China |
Ed Anderson (ODI) |
Potential impacts of climate change on $2-a-day poverty and child mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia (forthcoming) |
III: The economics of stabilisation (Chapters 7-13) |
Dennis Anderson (Imperial College) |
Costs and finance of abating carbon emissions in the energy sector |
Terry Barker and others (4CMR, University of Cambridge) |
The costs of greenhouse gas mitigation with induced technological change: a meta-analysis of estimates in the literature |
David Norse (UCL) |
Key trends in emissions from agriculture and use of policy instruments |
IV: Policy responses for mitigation (Chapters 14-17) |
Cameron Hepburn(St Hugh’s College, University of Oxford) |
Regulating by prices, quantities or both: an update and an overview |
Research Centre for Sustainable Development, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences |
Understanding
China’s energy policy: economic growth and energy use, fuel diversity,
energy/carbon intensity, and international cooperation |
The Auto Project |
Climate Change Mitigation Strategies for the Transportation Sector in China |
Zhang Anhua and Zhao Xingshu |
Efficiency Improvement and Energy Conservation in China’s Power Industry |
Li Junfeng, Shi Jinli and Ma Lingjuan |
China: Prospect for renewable energy development |
Zhang Qun, Beijing University of Science and Technology |
Chinese iron and steel industry development and environment protection |
Alan Ingham (University of Southampton) |
Climate change, mitigation and adaptation with uncertainty and learning |
Richard Klein (Potsdam) |
Climate policy in the face of uncertainty: the roles of adaptation and mitigation |
V Policy responses for adaptation (Chapters 18-20)
All of these papers were presented at a Stern Review Workshop on the “Economics of Adaptation” on 9 May 2006 |
Sam Fankhauser (EBRD) |
The economics of adaptation |
Frans Berkhout (Free University, The Netherlands) |
Rationale for adaptation in EU climate change policies |
Mac Callaway (UNEP) and Molly Hellmuth (IRI, Columbia University) |
Climate risk management for development: economic considerations |
Merylyn Hedger (Environment Agency) |
Assessing the costs and benefits of adaptation: perspectives from the front line |
Jane Milne (ABI) |
Assessing the costs and benefits of adaptation to climate change |
Richard Boyd and Alistair Hunt (Metroeconomica) |
Costing the local and regional impacts of climate change using the UKCIP costing methodology |
Karen O’Brien (University of Oslo) |
The economics of adaptation |
Saleemul Huq (IIED) |
Statement to the workshop on economics of adaptation |
VI International collective action (Chapters 21-27) |
International Rice Research Institute |
Climate change and rice cropping systems: potential adaptation and mitigation strategies |
William Blyth and Kirsty Hamilton (Chatham House) |
Aligning
climate and energy policy - creating incentives to invest in low carbon
technologies in the context of linked markets for fossil fuel,
electricity and carbon |
Maryanne Grieg-Gran (IIED) |
The cost of avoiding deforestation |
Max Tse (Nuffield College, University of Oxford) |
A theoretical note on cross-border interactions between carbon abatement schemes |
Duan Maosheng (Tsinghua University, Beijing) |
Technology based CDM: a conceptual framework |
And, let the polemic begin!
Please, NE, a bit more circumspection. The subject is spent.
Posted by: Lafayette | Sunday, November 05, 2006 at 07:17 AM
Yes if Lafayette is utterly certain that there is no problem, then how can anyone argue with that? You just need to believe it deeply enough and the problem will go away. The scientific consensus is obliterated. It couldn't withstand the raw certitude of Lafayette. Click your ruby slippers together and repeat, Climate Change is a hoax. Climate Change is a hoax. Climate Change is a hoax. Lafayette is certain. End of discussion.
Posted by: Bupa | Sunday, November 05, 2006 at 12:57 PM
"You just need to believe it deeply enough and the problem will go away. "
No, it suffices to wish that YOU go away.
Pot calling the kettle black.
Posted by: Lafayette | Sunday, November 05, 2006 at 06:12 PM
MIT and Caltech are competing for the rights over Lafayette's name.
The Lafayette school of climate studies. It's an interdisciplinary curriculum.
The faculty recommend that students not cloud their minds by reading peer reviewed journals. This curriculum requires no mathematics, no computers, and by all means no measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere. Students must come equipped with strong opinions and ruby slippers. Then hope for the best.
Posted by: Bupa | Monday, November 06, 2006 at 12:01 AM
Students do opine that the analysis essay accomplishing is the really time wasting thing. But, we count on the custom sociology essays service help anytime when that's needed.
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