4.7 Article

Climate clubs embedded in Article 6 of the Paris Agreement

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 180, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2022.106178

Keywords

Climate clubs; Article 6 of the Paris Agreement; assetization; effort-sharing; joint certification mechanism; carbon neutrality

Funding

  1. centre for Research into Energy Demand Solutions, UK Research and Innovation [EP/R035288/1]

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Recent times have seen more countries and private firms pledging carbon neutrality, but these pledges lack substance and structure. This paper proposes a governance innovation to overcome these issues by providing a unified yet customizable pathway towards carbon neutrality.
Recent times have witnessed an increasing number of countries and private firms pledging carbon neutrality by mid-century. Whilst representing a significant improvement in intentions to tackle climate change, such pledges lack substance and structure. For instance, individual pledges lack coordination and aggregation among peers, while strategies and measures to achieve ambitious targets are largely absent. Moreover, current disagreements obstructing progress in international climate change negotiations further undermine the reliability of carbon neutrality objectives. Effective international policies are needed to foster aggregate mitigation ambitions and the creation of adequate supporting mechanisms. This theoretical paper describes a governance innovation aimed at overcoming such shortfalls and disagreements through a unifying yet customizable pathway towards carbon neutrality. It does so by first outlining a political governance framework based on a climate club interpretation of Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Secondly, it proposes carbon emission mitigation effort sharing on a per capita basis to ensure efficiency, equity and political feasibility. Thirdly, this paper describes how the supply of certified mitigations of carbon emissions required to satisfy effort sharing-based demand can be assetized as carbon credits by operationalizing Article 6 as a joint certification mechanism. The resulting governance architecture for managing demand and supply of mitigations shifts efforts to tackle climate change from a 'problem-driven' cost approach to 'opportunity-driven' value creation pathways towards carbon neutrality.

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