• Main
  • Groups
  • My Zunia
Member Log in | Join Now Help
  • FR
  • Women in Business - Policies to Support Women’s Entrepreneur...

  • The Global Innovation Index 2012

  • Global Monitoring Report 2013: Rural-Urban Dynamics and the ...

by  DG Foundation
  • ALL
  • Culture
    • Arts
    • Cultural development
    • Leisure and entertainment
    • Mass media
    • Philosophy and religion
    • Sports and recreation
    • Tourism
  • Economy
    • Business development
    • Financial sector
    • Monetary and fiscal policy
    • Public sector
    • Rural Development
    • Trade
    • Urban development
  • Education
    • E-learning
    • Education for all
    • Education policy & management
    • Higher education
    • Technical training
  • Environment
    • Climate Change
    • Ecosystems
    • Environmental policy & management
    • Natural Disasters
    • Natural resources
    • Pollution
    • Water
  • Governance
    • E-government
    • Human rights
    • International relations
    • Law
    • Peace and security
    • Political institutions
    • Public administration
  • Health
    • Communicable Diseases
    • Food and nutrition
    • Health policy & management
    • Health services
    • People with disabilities
    • Reproduction health
  • Science & Tech
    • Engineering
    • ICT
    • Natural science
    • Social science
    • Technology innovation
    • Technology transfer
  • Sectors
    • Agriculture & Food
    • Aid Transparency
    • Construction
    • Energy
    • Manufacturing
    • Mining
    • Services
    • Transport
    • Open Data
    • Open Government
  • Society
    • Aid and relief
    • Civil society
    • Ethnic groups
    • Gender
    • Housing & migration
    • Population
    • Poverty
    • Social development
    • Social protection
Home » How to get climate policy back on course (July 2009)
How to get climate policy back on course (July 2009)
Climate Change, energy intensity, greenhouse gas emissions, industrial production, london school of economics, recession, United Kingdom
How to get climate policy back on course (July 2009)
sciencepolicy.colorado.edu –

In the economic crisis of 2008-09 there have been sharp reductions in industrial production. One unintended contingent consequence of the recession has been to reduce emissions including CO2 emissions. This paper is about the record of, the prospects for and the implications of decarbonization as a focus of climate policy.

Link: http://sciencepolicy.colorado.edu/admin/publication_files/resource-2731-2009.17.pdf
Added by View user profileSonia Hossain on October 10, 2009
Log in to share with Zunia groups Share with LinkedIn groups Share with Social Networks
Subscribe to comments Flag as inappropriate

Save
Login or register to comment

  • more
  • Contribute new post
Related posts
Climate change and agriculture
International Dimensions of Climate Change
Achieving food security in the face of climate change
UK fast start climate change finance
Climate Variability and Change and Sea-Level Rise in the Pacific Island Regions
Reason, Empathy, and Fair Play: The Climate Policy Gap
Enabling Local Green Growth
Terms and conditions  |   Privacy  |   Contact Development Gateway
Affiliated services  dgmarket.com  aiddata.org  monde.org
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
Feedback

Feedback

If you experience a bug or would like to see an addition on the current page, feel free to leave us a message.