Feasible mitigation actions in developing countries

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​Feasible mitigation actions in developing countries​
Jakob, M.; Steckel, J. C.; Klasen, S. ; Lay, J.; Grunewald, N.; Martínez-Zarzoso, I.   & Renner, S.  et al.​ (2014) 
Nature Climate Change4(11) pp. 961​-968​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2370 

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Authors
Jakob, Michael; Steckel, Jan Christoph; Klasen, Stephan ; Lay, Jann; Grunewald, Nicole; Martínez-Zarzoso, Inmaculada ; Renner, Sebastian ; Edenhofer, Ottmar
Abstract
Energy use is not only crucial for economic development, but is also the main driver of greenhouse-gas emissions. Developing countries can reduce emissions and thrive only if economic growth is disentangled from energy-related emissions. Although possible in theory, the required energy-system transformation would impose considerable costs on developing nations. Developed countries could bear those costs fully, but policy design should avoid a possible 'climate rent curse', that is, a negative impact of financial inflows on recipients' economies. Mitigation measures could meet further resistance because of adverse distributional impacts as well as political economy reasons. Hence, drastically re-orienting development paths towards low-carbon growth in developing countries is not very realistic. Efforts should rather focus on 'feasible mitigation actions' such as fossil-fuel subsidy reform, decentralized modern energy and fuel switching in the power sector.
Issue Date
2014
Journal
Nature Climate Change 
Project
SFB 990: Ökologische und sozioökonomische Funktionen tropischer Tieflandregenwald-Transformationssysteme (Sumatra, Indonesien) 
SFB 990 | C | C04: Mitigating trade-offs between economic and ecological functions and services through certification 
Language
English
Subject(s)
sfb990_reviews

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