EU Global Action on Climate Change and Regulatory Penalty Defaults

EU Global Action on Climate Change and Regulatory Penalty Defaults

Auteur : Joanne Scott

Date de publication : 2012

Éditeur : SSRN

Nombre de pages : 19

Résumé du livre

The European Union (EU) is a self-conscious leader in the 'fight' against climate change and an active proponent of an ambitious global climate regime. Nonetheless, to a significant degree its efforts have been in vain. A global agreement to extend or replace the Kyoto Protocol has not been put in place and prospects for an ambitious and comprehensive global climate agreement seem slim. It is against this backdrop of global climate inertia, that the EU has started to change its tack. Fuelled by both environmental and competitiveness concerns, the EU is acting to extend the global reach of its 'domestic' climate change law. It is engaging in climate change unilateralism, albeit unilateralism of a particular and interesting kind. The EU's climate change unilateralism is 'contingent' in the sense that the global extension of EU climate change law depends upon there being no adequate international agreement or third country climate action in place. As such the EU should be viewed as a reluctant unilateralist and as deploying contingent unilateralism as a means of incentivising urgently needed climate action elsewhere. The EU is shaping the legal structures of global governance in a multi-polar world by testing the boundaries of permissible unilateral action and by experimenting with a form of action-forcing contingent unilateralism that conceives unilateralism as a necessary policy option but one which, ultimately, is second best.

Connexion / Inscription

Saisissez votre e-mail pour vous connecter ou créer un compte

Connexion

Inscription

Mot de passe oublié ?

Nous allons vous envoyer un message pour vous permettre de vous connecter.