• The 2008 Garnaut Climate Change Review said that strong mitigation, consistent with Australia’s national interest, requires effective global action, with Australia playing its proportionate part. Effective global action requires comprehensive agreement among countries. • The Copenhagen meeting in December 2009 and the Cancun meeting in December 2010 moved the world towards several elements of such agreement, but away from one important element.- The reality of considerable positive movement is obscured by the diplomatic fiasco at Copenhagen, which was rescued from comprehensive failure by the President o
At the Paris climate conference last December, all the world's countries were able to reach a consen...
Stephen Howes, ANU Professor of Economics and key contributor to the Garnaut Climate Change Review, ...
Delaying action to mitigate climate change increases the risk that adverse climate change impacts, i...
In December 2009, State Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change' ('UNFC...
Australia is relatively well placed to do well in a world of comprehensive global efforts to reduce ...
In the lead-up to the Paris climate talks in November, countries continue to advance their domestic ...
The Garnaut Climate Change Review was the most comprehensive government inquiry into climate change ...
In this first update paper since the 2008 Garnaut Climate Change Review, five issues that have...
Australia and the international community are living through a time of consequences. If the mainstre...
Australia has moved rapidly from being one of the coalition of the unwilling (that small group of co...
Without mitigation, and in the absence of negative feedback from climate change, global emissions wi...
This policy brief places the upcoming climate change negotiations in Durban in their historical and...
The critical decade: Global action building on climate change / Tim Flannery, Gerry Hueston and Roge...
SummaryPoliticians are finally looking ahead to ways to move on from the failed Copenhagen summit in...
Although the Copenhagen Accord has been criticized by some as inadequate, it represents a potentiall...
At the Paris climate conference last December, all the world's countries were able to reach a consen...
Stephen Howes, ANU Professor of Economics and key contributor to the Garnaut Climate Change Review, ...
Delaying action to mitigate climate change increases the risk that adverse climate change impacts, i...
In December 2009, State Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change' ('UNFC...
Australia is relatively well placed to do well in a world of comprehensive global efforts to reduce ...
In the lead-up to the Paris climate talks in November, countries continue to advance their domestic ...
The Garnaut Climate Change Review was the most comprehensive government inquiry into climate change ...
In this first update paper since the 2008 Garnaut Climate Change Review, five issues that have...
Australia and the international community are living through a time of consequences. If the mainstre...
Australia has moved rapidly from being one of the coalition of the unwilling (that small group of co...
Without mitigation, and in the absence of negative feedback from climate change, global emissions wi...
This policy brief places the upcoming climate change negotiations in Durban in their historical and...
The critical decade: Global action building on climate change / Tim Flannery, Gerry Hueston and Roge...
SummaryPoliticians are finally looking ahead to ways to move on from the failed Copenhagen summit in...
Although the Copenhagen Accord has been criticized by some as inadequate, it represents a potentiall...
At the Paris climate conference last December, all the world's countries were able to reach a consen...
Stephen Howes, ANU Professor of Economics and key contributor to the Garnaut Climate Change Review, ...
Delaying action to mitigate climate change increases the risk that adverse climate change impacts, i...