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Transitioning from the CDM to a Clean Development Fund journal article

Grant Boyle, Jennifer Kirton, Rudi Lof, Tanya Nayler

Carbon & Climate Law Review, Volume 3 (2009), Issue 1, Page 9

stitutions and instruments that will serve as the foundation of international climate cooperation over the coming decades. One of the major tasks will be to assess the performance to date of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). The CDM is an emissions trading offset system that allows developed countries to meet their Kyoto targets by investing in emissions reduction projects in developing countries, where greenhouse gas (GHG) abatement is expected to be cheaper than it is in developed countries. At the same time, the CDM has the added p


Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading and Duties of the State: A Preliminary Review of Alberta’s Specified Gas Emitters Regulation journal article

Grant Boyle

Carbon & Climate Law Review, Volume 2 (2008), Issue 2, Page 11

tion Emissions trading has emerged in recent years as the regulatory instrument of choice for addressing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions among industrialized countries around the world. The recent enthusiasm for emissions trading typifies a larger political consensus over what could be characterized as an ecological modernist approach to addressing climate change that emphasizes the role of industry and innovation, flexibility and win-win approaches for the economy and environmental protection.1 In theory, emission trading allows those firm

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