International climate negotiations have specified that projects under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) should not lead to a "diversion" of official development assistance (ODA). It is however unchallenged that ODA can be used in capacity building for the CDM. Diversion can be interpreted in financial, sectoral and regional terms. There are possibilities to use ODA benchmarks to define diversion such as the UN 0.7% target but they are unlikely to be politically acceptable. On the project level, three main options exist but none of them is perfect. The value of emissions credits (CERs) could be deducted from ODA. This however leads to a long-term pressure on the ODA level. Differentiating an ODA-financed baseline project and a "piggyback...
This paper addresses the political acceptability and workability of CDM by and in developing countr...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has successfully demonstrated that market-based mechanisms can...
This paper examines the question of additionality, which is dealt with in Article 12.5 of the Kyoto ...
International climate negotiations have specified that projects under the Clean Development Mechanis...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) was originally seen as an instrument with a bilateral characte...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is a United Nations mechanism with the dual objective to reduc...
An Agreement on CDM rules in important both for industrialised and developing countries. As a flexib...
The environmental integrity of the CDM under the Kyoto Protocol depends on the possibility to avoid ...
We analyze the interaction of climate and development policy that has taken place since the early 19...
'The environmental integrity of the CDM under the Kyoto Protocol depends an the possibility to avoid...
The Clean Development Mechanism as a global flexible mechanism of the Kyoto protocol has a sound bas...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is one of three flexible mechanisms included in the Kyoto Prot...
Following an abrupt fall in carbon credit prices, 2012 has witnessed a disinterest on behalf of inve...
The participation of developing countries in the « carbon » market is made possible only through the...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is one of the three flexible mechanisms defined within the Kyo...
This paper addresses the political acceptability and workability of CDM by and in developing countr...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has successfully demonstrated that market-based mechanisms can...
This paper examines the question of additionality, which is dealt with in Article 12.5 of the Kyoto ...
International climate negotiations have specified that projects under the Clean Development Mechanis...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) was originally seen as an instrument with a bilateral characte...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is a United Nations mechanism with the dual objective to reduc...
An Agreement on CDM rules in important both for industrialised and developing countries. As a flexib...
The environmental integrity of the CDM under the Kyoto Protocol depends on the possibility to avoid ...
We analyze the interaction of climate and development policy that has taken place since the early 19...
'The environmental integrity of the CDM under the Kyoto Protocol depends an the possibility to avoid...
The Clean Development Mechanism as a global flexible mechanism of the Kyoto protocol has a sound bas...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is one of three flexible mechanisms included in the Kyoto Prot...
Following an abrupt fall in carbon credit prices, 2012 has witnessed a disinterest on behalf of inve...
The participation of developing countries in the « carbon » market is made possible only through the...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is one of the three flexible mechanisms defined within the Kyo...
This paper addresses the political acceptability and workability of CDM by and in developing countr...
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has successfully demonstrated that market-based mechanisms can...
This paper examines the question of additionality, which is dealt with in Article 12.5 of the Kyoto ...