Getting climate policy on track after The Hague

Joint Program Reprint • Journal Article
Getting climate policy on track after The Hague
Jacoby, H.D., and D.M. Reiner (2001)
International Affairs, 77(2): 297-312

Reprint 2001-2 [Download]

Abstract/Summary:

At The Hague in November 2000, a decade of apparent progress in the climate negotiations seemed to run off the tracks. The precipitating event was the meeting intended to settle the details of the Kyoto Protocol, which ended instead in disarray and recrimination. Though a surprise to many, this was a train wreck that had been proceeding in slow motion for several years, as the European Union, the United States and like-minded nations, and developing countries squabbled over the design and implementation of measures to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Some negotiators and analysts hope that agreement on the details, which seemed so close on the last day in The Hague, can be resurrected. We are not optimistic. It may, in fact, take many more years to put together the kind of effective, grand international deal that was sought in Kyoto, covering both the US-EU sticking points and difficult North-South issues. It is not clear that short-term failure is irreversible, however-or even undesirable,if what replaces the grand deal is a period of national experimentation that can then be knit back together into a more effective international system.
      To prepare for discussion of possible ways forward, we begin with our interpretation of the history of the climate negotiations. We trace the sequence of events from the FCCC signed at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, through crucial decisions reached in Berlin in 1995 and at the Kyoto meeting in 1997, and finally to the debacle in The Hague. In this process, the negotiators attempted to establish the long-term architecture of an emissions control pact among countries with very different political institutions and economic circumstances, and at the same time tried to set stringent targets for short-term action. They appear to have been too ambitious. The process never dealt adequately with developing country issues, and in setting targets they ran far ahead of domestic support in key countries.
      Against this background, we turn to an exploration of next steps in the international process. One conclusion is that the international discussions need to give serious attention to the prospect that mitigation actions will proliferate and deepen even without common agreement, as nations develop their own definitions, policy measures and market institutions. While modest, but important, short-term actions will proceed on a nation-by-nation basis, the public goods nature of the climate problem means that any meaningful long-term response will ultimately require agreement among nations over burdens and rules. The question then is what, short of a Kyoto-style protocol, can be done now to facilitate consistency later. Clearly, creative thought is needed, perhaps on a less grand scale than in recent years, to guide inevitable mitigation activities in more-or-less coherent directions, in the hope that tighter coordination will emerge.

© 2001 The Royal Institute of International Affairs

Citation:

Jacoby, H.D., and D.M. Reiner (2001): Getting climate policy on track after The Hague. International Affairs, 77(2): 297-312 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2346.00193)
  • Joint Program Reprint
  • Journal Article
Getting climate policy on track after The Hague

Jacoby, H.D., and D.M. Reiner

2001-2
77(2): 297-312

Abstract/Summary: 

At The Hague in November 2000, a decade of apparent progress in the climate negotiations seemed to run off the tracks. The precipitating event was the meeting intended to settle the details of the Kyoto Protocol, which ended instead in disarray and recrimination. Though a surprise to many, this was a train wreck that had been proceeding in slow motion for several years, as the European Union, the United States and like-minded nations, and developing countries squabbled over the design and implementation of measures to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Some negotiators and analysts hope that agreement on the details, which seemed so close on the last day in The Hague, can be resurrected. We are not optimistic. It may, in fact, take many more years to put together the kind of effective, grand international deal that was sought in Kyoto, covering both the US-EU sticking points and difficult North-South issues. It is not clear that short-term failure is irreversible, however-or even undesirable,if what replaces the grand deal is a period of national experimentation that can then be knit back together into a more effective international system.
      To prepare for discussion of possible ways forward, we begin with our interpretation of the history of the climate negotiations. We trace the sequence of events from the FCCC signed at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, through crucial decisions reached in Berlin in 1995 and at the Kyoto meeting in 1997, and finally to the debacle in The Hague. In this process, the negotiators attempted to establish the long-term architecture of an emissions control pact among countries with very different political institutions and economic circumstances, and at the same time tried to set stringent targets for short-term action. They appear to have been too ambitious. The process never dealt adequately with developing country issues, and in setting targets they ran far ahead of domestic support in key countries.
      Against this background, we turn to an exploration of next steps in the international process. One conclusion is that the international discussions need to give serious attention to the prospect that mitigation actions will proliferate and deepen even without common agreement, as nations develop their own definitions, policy measures and market institutions. While modest, but important, short-term actions will proceed on a nation-by-nation basis, the public goods nature of the climate problem means that any meaningful long-term response will ultimately require agreement among nations over burdens and rules. The question then is what, short of a Kyoto-style protocol, can be done now to facilitate consistency later. Clearly, creative thought is needed, perhaps on a less grand scale than in recent years, to guide inevitable mitigation activities in more-or-less coherent directions, in the hope that tighter coordination will emerge.

© 2001 The Royal Institute of International Affairs