Less than 2 °C? An Economic-Environmental Evaluation of the Paris Agreement. Nieto, J., Carpintero, Ó., & Miguel, L. J. 146:69–84.
Less than 2 °C? An Economic-Environmental Evaluation of the Paris Agreement [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
[Highlights] [::] 188 countries' INDCs have been analysed from a policies, finance and emissions point of view. [::] Policies and finance are faced up with socio-economic and biophysical constraints. [::] Unilateralism and finance approach lead to mismatches between policies and global objectives. [::] Constraints and mismatches could explain the Paris Agreement ineffectiveness. [Abstract] The literature dedicated to the analysis of the different climate agreements has usually focused on the effectiveness of the aims for emissions in the light of the advance in climate change. This article quantifies the variation in emissions that the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) will entail and their financial allocation and policies country-by-country and regionally. The objective is evaluating the Paris Agreement feasibility regarding the INDCs and its economic and environmental constraints. The criteria through which the 161 INDCs are analysed are as follows: i/ socio-economic impact of the transition; ii/ focus on energy management; iii/ substitution of non-renewable sources; iv/ the role of technology; v/ equality of the transition; vi/ compliance with emission reductions. The results obtained show that the Paris Agreement excessively relies on external financial support (41.4\,%). Moreover, its unilateralist approach, the socio-economic and biophysical constraints could be the underlying cause of the ineffectiveness of the 2 °C objective. This way, each country would emit an average of 37.8\,% more than in the years 2005-2015. When this is weighted, the figure would be a 19.3\,% increase, due mainly to the increases in China and India. These figures would lead the temperatures up to 3°-4 °C.
@article{nietoLessEconomicenvironmentalEvaluation2018,
  title = {Less than 2 °{{C}}? {{An}} Economic-Environmental Evaluation of the {{Paris Agreement}}},
  author = {Nieto, Jaime and Carpintero, Óscar and Miguel, Luis J.},
  date = {2018-04},
  journaltitle = {Ecological Economics},
  volume = {146},
  pages = {69--84},
  issn = {0921-8009},
  doi = {10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.10.007},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.10.007},
  abstract = {[Highlights]

[::] 188 countries' INDCs have been analysed from a policies, finance and emissions point of view. [::] Policies and finance are faced up with socio-economic and biophysical constraints. [::] Unilateralism and finance approach lead to mismatches between policies and global objectives. [::] Constraints and mismatches could explain the Paris Agreement ineffectiveness.

[Abstract]

The literature dedicated to the analysis of the different climate agreements has usually focused on the effectiveness of the aims for emissions in the light of the advance in climate change. This article quantifies the variation in emissions that the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) will entail and their financial allocation and policies country-by-country and regionally. The objective is evaluating the Paris Agreement feasibility regarding the INDCs and its economic and environmental constraints. The criteria through which the 161 INDCs are analysed are as follows: i/ socio-economic impact of the transition; ii/ focus on energy management; iii/ substitution of non-renewable sources; iv/ the role of technology; v/ equality of the transition; vi/ compliance with emission reductions. The results obtained show that the Paris Agreement excessively relies on external financial support (41.4\,\%). Moreover, its unilateralist approach, the socio-economic and biophysical constraints could be the underlying cause of the ineffectiveness of the 2 °C objective. This way, each country would emit an average of 37.8\,\% more than in the years 2005-2015. When this is weighted, the figure would be a 19.3\,\% increase, due mainly to the increases in China and India. These figures would lead the temperatures up to 3°-4 °C.},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-14484400,~to-add-doi-URL,climate-change,constraints,economics,global-scale,global-warming,rcp85}
}

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