Diogenes, you missed Hansen's # 1 part of his plan which is the CCL carbon fee / price, and # 2 part of his plan which is getting China and the USA in bed
together on the carbon price to «lead the world» and fast paced nuclear development together.
Not exact matches
Together with our preceding report, How To Adopt a Winning
Carbon Price, which focused
on British Columbia's
carbon tax, we've now offered a look «under the hood» of the two major approaches to
carbon pricing, and the important lessons offered by each.
The other thing that I think is really important to watch is the possibility of a climate deal with China, and that could be really, really important, because you've basically got the two climate change superpowers finally coming
together on this, and if they created some kind of an agreement to limit emissions, even that could have the de facto effect of creating a global
carbon price.
In a recent interview, Nordhaus - whose models project a smaller economic impact than most - said that regardless of whether the models showing larger or smaller economic impacts from climate change are correct, «We've got to get
together as a community of nations and impose restraints
on greenhouse gas emissions and raise
carbon prices.
Climate XChange and CABA came
together in October 2016 largely over our common goal of enacting a
price on carbon pollution in Massachusetts and beyond.
«We've got to get
together as a community of nations and impose restraints
on greenhouse gas emissions and raise
carbon prices.
We teamed up with Dr. Naomi Oreskes and snowboarder Jeremy Jones to put
together this piece, featured in The Boston Globe, calling for a
price on carbon.
We helped coordinate an all - star crew of economists to put
together an op - ed
on carbon pricing, featured in the Boston Business Journal.
70 companies across 20 sectors from nearly 30 countries have aligned with the Business Leadership Criteria
on Carbon Pricing, a set of ambitious standards to help companies set, advocate and report
on a
price on carbon, developed by the UNGC
together with UNEP, the UNFCCC secretariat and Caring for Climate partners — CDP, Principles for Responsible Investment, The Climate Group and UN Foundation.
The report «identif [ies] the range of
carbon prices that,
together with other supportive policies, would deliver
on the Paris climate targets agreed by nearly 200 countries in December 2015,» according to the council's press release, which was issued under the title, Leading Economists: A Strong
Carbon Price Needed to Drive Large - Scale Climate Action.