International Initiative on Climate Technology Policy

Documents for the ‘Events’ Category


Washington, DC May 2008 - Background Materials

The following is a list of background materials on Technology Innovation and Climate Change with a brief description of each document and links to the document.

  • Community R&D Information Service (CORDIS). “Patent Forum Asks How IPRs Can Help Solve Climate Problem,” May 8, 2008. Available at the CORDIS website. (Developing countries defend IPRs as necessary to stimulate and reward innovation, whereas developed countries see IPRs as a barrier to technology transfer. However, to date the debates over the role of IPRs in clean technology development and transfer have been largely theoretical.)
  • De Boer, Yvo. “Inventing a Cleaner Future: Climate Change and the Opportunity for Intellectual Property,” Presentation at the European Patent Forum 2008, May 7, 2008. Available at the EPO.org website. (A revolutionary international clean energy technology mechanism must address all stages of the technology cycle, from innovation to application, with consideration of funding and policy for each stage. A special patent regime for climate change might include public ownership of IPRs and public-private partnerships in purchasing commitments, voluntary buy-outs of IPRs, and compulsory licensing.)
  • Georghiou, Luke. “ Europe ’s Research System Must Change,” Commentary, Nature, April 2008. (To more effectively address Europe ’s economic, social, and environmental goals, research must be more effectively coordinated with policy and regulation setting.)
  • G8 Summit Declaration 2007, Growth and Responsibility in the World Economy, available at http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/92264.pdf. (In Heiligendamm, the G8 countries agreed to urgently develop and deploy clean energy technologies in all areas of energy production and use and to collaboratively accelerate the widespread adoption of clean energy technologies in developing economies.)
  • Kahn, Debra. “More than Half of State’s Emissions Cuts to be Achieved Through Regulation.” Climate Wire, May 14, 2008. ( California plans to give direct regulation a larger role than emissions trading in fighting climate change, with a majority of emissions reductions coming from regulations on specific sectors of the economy.)
  • Pearce, Fred. “Dirty, Sexy Money,” New Scientist, April 19, 2008. (Cap and trade systems may deliver big profits while doing little to curb climate change.)
  • Peilke, Roger, Tom Wigely, and Christopher Green. “Dangerous Assumptions,” Commentary, Nature, April 2008. (Technological advances needed to stabilize carbon dioxide emissions may be much greater than previously believed. Policy must focus directly on motivating technological innovation.)
  • Revkin, Andrew C. “The Technology Gap in the Climate Debate,” New York Times, Dot Earth (blog), April 2, 2008. Available at http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/04/02/the-technology-gap-in-the-climate-debate/. (As economists, scientists, and energy policy experts increasingly criticize existing approaches to climate stabilization, the relative merits of markets, science, and personal behavior need to be explored.)
  • Rosenthal, Elisabeth. “ Europe Turns Back to Coal, Raising Climate Fears.” New York Times, April 23, 2008. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/23/world/europe/23coal.html?hp. (Faced with rising energy demand, soaring oil and natural gas prices, energy security concerns, and political opposition to nuclear energy, European countries plan to build about 50 coal-fired plants over the next five years—plants with operating lives of some five decades.)
  • Xinhua Press. “ China Calls for Technology Transfer, Fund to Address Climate Change.” Thaindian News, April 24, 2008. Available at http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/world-news/china-calls-for-technology-transfer-fund-to-address-climate-change_10041560.html. (Emphasizing that breakthrough technologies are crucial to stabilizing the climate, a senior Chinese official has called on the international community to develop a mechanism for clean energy technology development and transfer.)

Washington, DC May 2008 - Reports

The following is a list of reports (PDF format) that were prepared and circulated by participants at the IICTP meeting on Climate Technology Innovation: 

• The Clean Energy Group/Meridian proposal titled “Climate Technology Innovation: a New Strategy and Structure,” outlines a new approach to the climate innovation process. Also included for consideration is a short CEG paper addressing the topic of “picking technology winners.”

• A paper by Mutsuyoshi Nishimura, Senior Advisor to the Cabinet, Japanese Prime Minister’s Office titled “Innovation Strategies to Achieve GHG Peak and Decline: A Proposal” calls for a new climate mechanism on technology innovation; unfortunately, he was not able to attend the meeting but was kind enough to write some of his perspectives and will participate in future work.

• Richard Benedick, former Ambassador to the US who negotiated the Montreal Protocol, in a paper titled “Confronting Climate Change: The Technology Imperative,” writes that world leaders must finally and frankly assess the uncomfortable lessons of the Kyoto Protocol and that arbitrary short-term emission targets will not promote the revolution in energy technology research, development, and diffusion that is essential to avoiding potentially catastrophic climate change.

• Jill Panetta, co-founder of InnoCentive, has written a paper titled “Distributed R&D,” explaining how distributed innovation processes can be applied to the private corporate sector’s work on product innovation.

• Sasha Mackler, Associate Technical Director, and Tracy Terry, Technical Director, of the National Commission on Energy Policy have enclosed a summary, "Overview of NCEP Projects Focusing on Energy Technology Policy," of their ongoing projects regarding new technology based approaches in the U.S. as well as the need for new institutions to manage these new technology programs.

 


Washington, DC May 2008 - Meeting Summary, Participants and Agenda

Growing interest and attention is now focusing on the need for a clearer and more robust technology-based strategy for addressing climate change. While cap and trade has received considerable work and attention internationally, experts increasingly recognize the need for accelerated innovation in clean energy technology. However, key questions remain about what a technology-based strategy should look like and where it will be housed.  

The objectives of the meeting were as follows:

  • To apply lessons learned from fields other than climate and energy to technology innovation, product development, and deployment challenges in the climate and energy sector.
  • To begin developing a practical proposal based on distributed innovation strategies, which are being applied in other sectors, for accelerating the development and deployment of clean energy technology at the pace and scale demanded by climate change.
  • To outline the organizational elements of a new, independent, and nimble structure that could execute these new strategies.

Meeting Documents

  • Download the Complete Meeting Summary (to be posted soon)
  • Download the Participants List
  • Download the Meeting Agenda

File Type: PDF
Source: Clean Energy Group

 


Washington, DC May 2008 - Presentations

The following is a list of links to presentations that were delivered at the IICTP Climate Technology Innovation meeting, hosted by Clean Energy Group, Meridian Institute, with the Clean Air Task Force:


Washington, DC - Climate Technology Innovation - May 2008

On May 28 and 29, 2008, the third meeting of the Montreal Group on Climate Stabiliation/IICTP met in Washington, D.C. to discuss the development of a new technology-based strategy and structure that could be incorporated into the international climate framework as well as national, regional, and other forums. Meeting participants from the U.S. and Europe included experts in climate and energy as well as experts from other fields that face increasingly large scale and complex technology challenges, including public health, agricultural productivity, and consumer product development. 

This meeting was organized by Clean Energy Group, the Meridian Institute, and Clean Air Task Force with funding by the UK environmental agency DEFRA.

The following meeting documents are available to download:

  • Meeting Summary
  • Meeting Agenda and Participants
  • Presentations
  • Documents and Reports 

 


European Commission Commits to Climate Action

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[Press Release] European Commission agreed on 23 January 2008 to a far-reaching package of proposals that will deliver the European Council’s commitments to fight climate change and promote renewable energy. These measures will dramatically increase the use of renewable energy in each country and set legally enforceable targets for governments to achieve them. All major CO2 emitters will be given an incentive to develop clean production technologies through a thorough reform of the Emissions Trading System (ETS) that will impose an EU-wide cap on emissions. The package seeks to deliver the European Union to reduce greenhouse gases by at least 20% and increases to 20% the share of renewable energies in the energy consumption by 2020, as agreed by EU leaders in March 2007. The emissions reduction will be increased to 30% by 2020 when a new global climate change agreement is reached.

The full proposal can be found by clicking here.


Low-Carbon Technologies in the Post-Bali Period: Accelerting Their Development and Deployment

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Christian Egenhofer, Lew Milford, Noriko Jujiwara, Thomas L. Brewer and Monica Alessi. European Climate Platform (ECP) Report No. 4, December 2007.

This report analyzes the issue of technology development, demonstration and diffusion with a view to indentifying the key elements of a complementary global technology track in the post-2012 framework.

This report is based on discussions at the ECP seminar on Strategic Aspects of Technology for the UNFCCC and Climate Change Debate: The Post-Bali Technology Agenda, 3 October 2007, Brussels.

 


APEC Leaders’ Declaration on Climate Change, Energy Security and Clean Development

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Link to the APEC Economic Leaders Declaration on Climate Change, Energy Security and Clean Development, from the 19th APEC Ministerial Meeting, Sydney, Austrailia, Sept. 9, 2007. 


CEG Report: Massive Climate Technology Innovation: A New Geometry of Complementary Strategies Post-2012

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Lewis Milford, Clean Energy Group. September 4, 2007. Lewis Milford will present this paper at the G8 Gleneagles Ministerial Meeting in Berlin, Germany in early September 2007.


Gleneagles Dialogue - Third meeting of the Energy and Environment Ministers

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Link to the Heiligendamm G8 Summit web page for the Gleneagles Dialogue. The energy and environment ministers from the 20 major energy-consuming countries will meet from 9 to 11 September 2007 in Berlin for the third "Gleneagles Dialogue". Lewis Milford, President of Clean Energy Group and IICTP founder, has been asked to provide an input statement in the technology session.


APEC Austrailia 2007 - Homepage

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Link to the APEC Sydney Conference Homepage. September 2007.


Clean Energy Group to participate in the September 11, 2007 meeting of Ad Hoc Group 11 on International Action on Climate Change

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Clean Energy Group will participate in the European Commission High Level Group on Competitiveness, Energy and the Environment Sherpa SubGroup; Meeting of the Ad Hoc Group 11: International Action on Climate Change. Daniel Dutcher, CEG Project Director, will attend this meeting to submit CEG’s Written Contribution

See accompanying Clean Energy Group Statement to the Gleneagles Dialogue. Download the document (PDF)


United Nations Climate Change Conference, 3-14 December, Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia (COP 13 and CMP 3)

 Link to the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali website (Link)

Link to the United Nations Climate Change Conference, 3-14 December, Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia (COP 13 and CMP 3) - Event homepage.


UNFCCC - Dialogue on Long-term Cooperative Action to Address Climate Change

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UNFCCC - Dialogue on long-term cooperative action to address climate change by enhancing implementation of the Convention. Fourth workshop, Vienna, 27-31 August 2007. Dialogue working paper 8.

Report on the analysis of existing and potential investment and financial flows relevant to the development of an effective and appropriate international response to climate change.


Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate Homepage

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Link to the Asia Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate website.


APEC Homepage

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Link to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Homepage.


APEC - 2005 Energy Ministerial Meeting Documents

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Link to Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation 2005 Energy Ministerial Meeting documents, Korea, October 2005


UNFCCC Homepage

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Link the the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change website.


G8 Summit - Gleneagles 2005 - Climate web page

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Link to the Gleneagles G8 Summit web page concerning climate.


G8 Summit 2007 - Heiligendamm - Summit Documents

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Link to the Heiligendamm G8 Summit Documents. June 2007.