Byass, who co-authored one of the papers, observed that previous
international climate talks focused more on economic issues relating to development, curbing emissions and spreading the cost burden.
Not exact matches
As explained clearly in «The Global
Climate Change Lobby,» an excellent new report from the Center for Public Integrity, corporate lobbyists and trade associations
focus their attention on tampering with domestic legislative efforts, and then stand by and watch as their positions and
talking points contaminate
international negotiations indirectly.
The paper, due to be released in November, will aim to
focus minds ahead of global UN
climate talks that month in Lima, Peru, which aims to lay the groundwork for the crucial Paris Summit in late 2015, where countries have agreed to finalize an
international emission reduction deal.
He
focused his
talk on the market for
climate services and pointed out the importance of discussing which are the barriers (as well as the enablers) to the faster development of an
international market for
climate services.