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Globalization and the Environment

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Presentation on theme: "Globalization and the Environment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Globalization and the Environment

2 What is today’s most pressing environmental problem?
What should be done about it? LTKOJY9M

3 Is Globalization bad for the environment?

4 The pro-globalization case

5 Poverty as a cause of environmental problems
Deforestation Desertification Unsanitary water Population growth Downward spiral

6 Environmental Kuznets Curve

7 Environmental Kuznets Curve
Citizens’ demands Firms’ and governments’ financial and institutional capacity Industry to services Eg: Japan

8 Free Trade Comparative advantage and efficiency Technology
Competition and productivity Price signals Cleaner industries Market access. Eg: California emissions standards Green markets

9 MNCs Technologies, expertise and funds. Eg: SSA and NK.
Higher standards: tech and management; pressure; codes of conduct and risk management; efficiency and competitiveness. Voluntary trend to wards ‘greening’. ‘Tunnel through’ K curve.

10 Critics Stuck along K curve Irreplaceable losses
Cumulative change and crisis Not all pollutants. Eg: CO2. Relocated polluters. Eg: Japan.

11 Unequal consumption. Consumerism. Production and consumption distance. Unsustainable growth and consumption. Prices of traded goods don’t reflect costs.

12 Race to the bottom: pollution havens and double standards.
North exploiting South: pollution and unsustainable resource exports. Illegal and destructive practices. Eg: loggers, miners, oil comps, chemical comps.

13 Why is it difficult to tackle environmental challenges like climate change?

14 http://www.theonion.com/article/marxists-apartment-a-microcosm- of-why-marxism-does-1382

15 4 main types of goods “Private goods” are excludable: it is possible to prevent others from getting them. There is also rivalry for private goods. If you have one, it means that no one else can have it. “Public goods” are nonexcludable and nonrivalrous “Club goods” are excludable and nonrivalrous. “Common goods” are nonexcludable and rivalrous.

16 public goods: underprovision; free riders
common goods: the “tragedy of the commons” – Garrett Hardin Elinor Ostrom:

17 Externalities

18 The Ozone: reason for optimism?

19 Ozone depletion Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
1985: ‘hole’ found over Antarctica 1987 Montreal Protocol: ltd CFC and halon production 1990: South agreed to phase out. MP parties created Multilateral Fund for the Implementation of MP More conferences

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22 Reasons Mid-1980s: 21 firms in 16 countries; 88% in North
#1 producer DuPont sought substitutes and phased out CFCs Different for climate change?

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25 https://www3.epa.gov/climatechange/test/climatechange/ghgemissi ons/global.html
carbon-dioxide-emissions-country-data-co2

26 12 December 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement
195 countries To keep global temperatures "well below" 2.0C (3.6F) above pre- industrial times and "endeavour to limit" them even more, to 1.5C To limit the amount of greenhouse gases emitted by human activity to the same levels that trees, soil and oceans can absorb naturally, beginning at some point between 2050 and 2100 To review each country's contribution to cutting emissions every five years so they scale up to the challenge For rich countries to help poorer nations by providing "climate finance" to adapt to climate change and switch to renewable energy.

27 Christiana Figueres:

28 http://www. nytimes. com/2016/11/22/us/politics/donald-trump-visit
On climate change, Mr. Trump refused to repeat his promise to abandon the international climate accord reached last year in Paris, saying, “I’m looking at it very closely.” Despite the recent appointment to his transition team of a fierce critic of the Paris accords, Mr. Trump said that “I have an open mind to it” and that clean air and “crystal clear water” were vitally important.

29 America’s uncertain stance toward global warming under the coming administration of Donald J. Trump has given China a leading role in the fight against climate change. It has called on the United States to recognize established science and to work with other countries to reduce dependence on dirty fuels like coal and oil. But there is a problem: Even as it does so, China is scrambling to mine and burn more coal. A lack of stockpiles and worries about electricity blackouts are spurring Chinese officials to reverse curbs that once helped reduce coal production. Mines are reopening. Miners are being lured back with fatter paychecks.


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