Archive | Environment

Cancun and the rediscovery of the lost, limited art of climate diplomacy

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CANCUN — It is hardly news anymore when international talks on climate change fail to produce a breakthrough agreement. But the real story of the annual UN climate conference, which concludes Friday in Cancun, Mexico, is what was happening on the sidelines of the conference. Last year’s summit on climate change in Copenhagen was ruined [...]

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Posted in Climate, COP16, Economics, Energy, Environment, European Union, Global Governance, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United StatesComments Off

Green is the new black

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CANCUN–Kermit the Frog knew it all along: Green is cool. And it seems that more and more humans, in particular those working on climate change, are beginning to follow his logic. While the negotiations at COP16 in Cancun still promise to deliver some results by the end of the week – notably on deforestation efforts [...]

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Posted in Climate, COP16, Energy, EnvironmentComments Off

Lessons from Carmel Mountain

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LONDON/ISTANBUL — When disaster strikes, whether it is a hurricane, a flood, or a tsunami, the people affected need assistance—and they need it fast.  If there is a positive byproduct of these catastrophic events, it is the potential to bring people, nations, and countries closer together. So was the case last weekend when Israel faced [...]

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Posted in Environment, International Security, Israel, Middle East, NATO, Transatlantic Take, TurkeyComments Off

Climate Lessons from Steven Chu

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CANCUN – Secretary of Energy Steven Chu’s remarks yesterday in Cancun were attended by an expectant international audience clamoring to hear the latest official word on what Washington intends to do about global warming, despite roundly subdued expectations of the U.S. and the UN process both. Although one might have expected to hear boilerplate remarks [...]

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Posted in Climate, COP16, Energy, Environment, United StatesComments Off

Cancun: Sunny, with chance of storms toward the end of the week

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The climate change negotiations in Cancun started into their second and last week this morning. Ministers are beginning to trickle in and the President of Mexico has arrived. With the politicians arriving, the final documents of the COP –UN speak for the climate negotiations- will have to be finalized any day now to then be [...]

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Posted in Climate, Energy, Environment, European Union, Transatlantic Relations, United StatesComments Off

Promise and politeness in the climate talks at Cancun

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Cancun, December 4, 2010–The mood at Cancun could not be more different from last year’s annual conference on climate change, which took place in Copenhagen. Even the setting of the Cancun conference—a beach resort in tropical weather—conveys a more mellow kind of international climate conference than Copenhagen’s freezing temperatures and hot tempers last December. Getting [...]

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Posted in Climate, Energy, Environment, Uncategorized, United StatesComments Off

Cancun and the End of Climate Diplomacy

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WASHINGTON — Next Monday, climate diplomats will gather in Cancun, Mexico, for the 16th annual installment of global climate negotiations. Expectations are low following the partial collapse of last December’s session in Copenhagen, Denmark. A global treaty to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012, seems years away and may never meet expectations. At [...]

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Posted in Climate, Energy, Environment, Global Governance, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United States1 Comment

This election frustrates European partners

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WASHINGTON — American elections are largely driven by domestic concerns, but their outcomes have global ramifications. Never has this been more evident than in the wake of this year’s U.S. Congressional elections, which produced an overwhelming Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives and returned a razor-thin Democratic majority in the U.S. Senate. The [...]

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Posted in Afghanistan, Economics, Energy, Environment, European Union, Iran, Middle East, Politics, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, Transatlantic Trends, United States3 Comments

Climate change and the public: The end of a love story?

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Article originally published on euobserver.com Remember last year when the whole world was looking at a small and cold country in Europe – Denmark – mesmerized by an international conference on climate change known as COP15? This year, many people won’t even know where the follow-up conference, COP16, is taking place. While the next round [...]

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Posted in Climate, Energy, Environment, European Union, Germany, Transatlantic TrendsComments Off

How a California referendum could define the U.S. climate and energy debate

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WASHINGTON — The November U.S. midterm elections could shift control of the House of Representatives and possibly the Senate to the opposition Republicans, moves that would have widespread implications for U.S. policy on all fronts. But an obscure-sounding referendum in the state of California, if passed by a plurality of California voters on November 2, [...]

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Posted in Climate, Economics, Environment, Politics, United StatesComments Off

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