Cancun does not solve key issues: Sorensen

The international climate process survived at COP16, but the  UN Cancun Agreement does not solve key issues such as legally binding emission targets and carbon pricing, according to chair of the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change, Ole Beier Sorensen.

The agreements did not make “national emission reduction targets legally binding and they do not ensure a price on carbon”, Sorensen who attended Cancun with David Russell from USS, and Stephanie Pfeifer from IIGCC.

In addition, the future of the Kyoto Protocol remained undecided and this implied “considerable uncertainty” for the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), said Sorensen, who is ATP’s strategy and research chief.

As well, the present situation where the US was outside the Kyoto framework was not resolved, and in the absence of a legally binding global agreement, real policy change remained in the hands of national initiatives and business.

Sorensen said the shift to a low-carbon economy was not yet in sight, and the overall efforts on emission reductions were left “much short” of what was needed, “with the result that mitigation costs will increase even further”.

Other areas which fell short in the run-up to COP17 in Durban next year included:

Sponsored Content
  • securing a sufficiently ambitious international emissions reduction target
  • agreeing on how this translates into national emissions targets
  • agreeing on the future of emissions trading, and
  • the lack of agreement on a national climate policy in the US congress.

Sorensen warned that in the absence of a global agreement and “in view of a cumbersome and lengthy international process, there is bound to be a greater focus on bilateral rather than multi-lateral agreements between countries”.

The private sector was crucial and was out-pacing politics, he said, “but in the longer term, the fundamental change to a low-carbon economy needs to be harnessed by policy”.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Infrastructure – the way out for the west?

Infrastructure investment has not caught on in the US, compared with institutional investing peers such as Canada, Australia and the UK. But Arjuna Sittampalam, research associate with EDHEC-Risk Institute and editor of Investment Management Review, argues infrastructure is perceived as a way out of the morass in which the US finds itself.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1

US ivy league endowments cling to returns … just

Endowments are back, just. The annual survey of their returns by NACUBO-Commonfund showed an average return of 11.9 per cent for the 850 college and university endowments in the study for the year to June 2010.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Forget sovereign debt as a safe haven: Mercer

The status of sovereign debt as a safe-haven investment has been put into question and the whole approach to bond investing may need to be revisited, according to Mercer, which has urged institutional investors to focus in the coming year on the ‘new realities’ of the global marketplace, which includes sufficient flexibility in their portfolios.mrec4inarticleinline

Israel’s offshore resources to secure SWF future

Israel is considering establishing its first sovereign wealth fund within one year using revenues from recent offshore natural-gas finds, following calls by the International Monetary Fund to do so.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Putting your footprint where your mouth is: CalSTRS reports on carbon emissions

In the latest move to demonstrate the same commitment to climate change it expects from its portfolio companies, CalSTRS has signed The Climate Registry, a leading voluntary greenhouse gas registry in North America. The $147 billion fund will report on its carbon footprint, which was dramatically reduced when it moved into its new building in

New Jersey chair calls for allocation review

Chair of the investment council of the $70 billion State of New Jersey’s Division of Investment, Robert Grady, has called for a new asset allocation plan, pointing in particular to the fund’s cash position which sits at around 2.75 per cent. The fund has also been overweight its domestic equity allocation by about 6 per

Previous