Filling in for Governments? The Role of the Private Actors in the International Climate Regime

C. Streck
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change abandons the Kyoto Protocol’s paradigm of binding emissions targets and relies instead on countries’ voluntary contributions. However, the Paris Agreement encourages not only governments but also sub-national governments, corporations and civil society to contribute to reaching ambitious climate goals. In a transition from the regulated architecture of the Kyoto Protocol to the open system of the Paris Agreement, the Agreement seeks to integrate non-state actors into the treaty-based climate regime. In 2014 the secretariat of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Peru and France created the Non-State Actor Zone for Climate Action (and launched the Global Climate Action portal). In December 2019, this portal recorded more than twenty thousand climate-commitments of private and public non-state entities, making the non-state venues of international climate meetings decisively more exciting than the formal negotiation space. This level engagement and governments’ response to it raises a flurry of questions in relation to the evolving nature of the climate regime and climate change governance, including the role of private actors as standard setters and the lack of accountability mechanisms for non-state actions. This paper takes these developments as occasion to discuss the changing role of private actors in the climate regime.
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代替政府?私人行为者在国际气候制度中的作用
2015年关于气候变化的《巴黎协定》放弃了《京都议定书》具有约束力的排放目标模式,转而依赖各国的自愿捐款。然而,《巴黎协定》不仅鼓励各国政府,也鼓励地方政府、企业和民间社会为实现雄心勃勃的气候目标做出贡献。在从《京都议定书》的监管架构向《巴黎协定》的开放体系过渡的过程中,该协定寻求将非国家行为者纳入基于条约的气候制度。2014年,《联合国气候变化框架公约》秘书处秘鲁和法国设立了气候行动非国家行为者区(并启动了全球气候行动门户网站)。2019年12月,该门户网站记录了私人和公共非国家实体的2万多项气候承诺,使国际气候会议的非国家场所比正式谈判空间更令人兴奋。这种级别的参与和政府对此的回应引发了一系列与气候制度和气候变化治理的演变性质有关的问题,包括私人行为者作为标准制定者的作用,以及缺乏非国家行动的问责机制。本文以这些事态发展为契机,讨论私人行为者在气候制度中不断变化的角色。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
19
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