Countries, including members of the G20, would have to strengthen the credibility of their pledges to limit or reduce annual emissions of greenhouse gases.
This is in order to build confidence in the Paris Agreement
on climate change, according to a new report published by the Grantham Research
Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and the ESRC Centre for Climate
Change Economics and Policy at the London School of Economics and Political
Science.
The report provides the results of an analysis of “intended
nationally determined contributions”, or INDCs, which were submitted by more
than 180 countries ahead of the Paris climate change summit in December 2015,
focusing on the credibility, rather than the ambition, of pledges about future
emissions.
The report by Alina Averchenkova and Samuela Bassi concluded
that “Governments have the opportunity to actively improve the credibility of
their current and future commitments in their NDCs [nationally determined
contributions], especially by strengthening: their policies and legislation;
the transparency, effectiveness and inclusiveness of their decision-making
process, and their climate change public bodies”.
It added: “This can be done, for example, by: adopting
framework legislation and/or implementing carbon pricing mechanisms; assigning
clear responsibility for climate change policy and establishing independent
consultative bodies; creating inclusive processes for consulting and involving
stakeholders; increasing the frequency of preparing greenhouse gas inventories;
and improving public awareness about climate change.”
It identified key elements for the credibility against which
each country’s pledges could be assessed. These were applied by the authors to
the INDCs that were submitted by G20 members ahead of the Paris summit.
They concluded: “Almost all the emission reductions pledged
by G20 countries appear to be underpinned by policy and legislation that is at
least ‘moderately supportive’ in terms of credibility. However, G20 countries’
emissions targets were found to score lower on the transparency, inclusiveness
and effectiveness of their decision-making processes and the level of political
constraints to limit policy reversal, and on the existence of dedicated and
independent public bodies on climate change.”
The report states: “No INDC from a G20 country is found to
have ‘no credible basis’ across all the determinants explored in this analysis.
However, there are significant differences in the level of and balance among
the determinants of credibility for the individual G20 members.
“For many G20 members, most determinants appear to be
‘largely supportive’ in terms of credibility. These include the European Union
and its individual G20 members (France, Germany, Italy and the UK), as well as
South Korea.
“Several G20 members have determinants that are at least
‘moderately supportive’ in terms of credibility, but display a significant
weakness in one determinant; this includes Australia, Brazil, Japan, Mexico,
Russia, Turkey, South Africa and the United States.
“A number of G20 countries have scope for significantly
increasing credibility across most determinants. These are Argentina, Canada,
China, India, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia.”
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