On the Road to Paris: How Can the EU Avoid Failure at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP 21)?
At the 15th UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Conference of the Parties (COP) meeting in Copenhagen in 2009, the European Union (EU) failed to achieve most of its objectives. In 2011, at the 17th COP meeting in Durban, the EU was crucial in bringing about a deal on a roadmap towards a new global climate change agreement, to be adopted in December 2015 at the 21st COP meeting in Paris. This paper examines the lessons the EU has learned and can learn from its experience in Copenhagen in the run-up to Paris. It considers, first, the EU’s relative bargaining power; second, the relative position of its objectives/interests mapped against those of other negotiating parties; and third, how the EU can leverage its relative power through strategic action in pursuit of its objectives. The paper recommends that the EU focus on building a broad alliance with other progressive negotiating parties on mitigation in order to avoid a lowest common denominator outcome.
-
Details
Roma, IAI, September 2015, 13 p. -
Issue
15|33 -
ISBN/ISSN/DOI:
978-88-98650-57-6
Introduction
1. The EU’s relative bargaining power in the UNFCCC
2. The relative position of the EU’s objectives
3. The EU’s strategic activities
Conclusion and recommendations
References