International Initiative on Climate Technology Policy

Documents for the ‘Distributed Innovation’ Category

These resouces describes new theories of distributed innovation and distributed learning to overcome institutuional and market barriers to new low carbon technologies.


Climate Change Crash Course for Copenhagen: The Six Simple Reasons Why We Need Global Technology Cooperation

 By Lewis Milford and Jessica Morey, Clean Energy Group. December 2009.

This brief 8-page document addresses the “why” of international technology collaboration — the basic reasons why global technology policies – for product development — beyond cap and trade are needed for stabilization. The paper reviews the major reasons why the world needs coordinated and collaborative climate technology innovation and product development – in addition to emissions cap and trading. To simplify core principles, this paper explains why technology innovation is needed and why countries should pursue complementary technology innovation policies on a coordinated, global basis. The paper supports the arguments with experts’ quotations and then provides a comprehensive list of citations and key reports for further reading on each point in the Appendix.

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Source: Clean Energy Group
Format: PDF


A New International Climate Innovation Facility: Why, What and How?

By Lewis Milford and Jessica Morey, Clean Energy Group. December 2009.

This one-page document explains the reasons to consider a new international climate innovation facility to meet the challenges of climate recovery.

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Source: Clean Energy Group
File Format: PDF


International Climate Technology Innovation Intiative: Structure and Strategy

 By Clean Energy Group, Meridian Institute and Center for European Policy Studies, December 2009

This paper recommends “how” an international technology collaboration could be structured. It proposes using “virtual” and low cost “distributed innovation” and Internet-based tools to accelerated technology cooperation and change – in the same way most major corporations today create collaborative products with partners outside their companies. It argues that climate policy makers should use these corporate strategies in climate, and accelerate global product development in low carbon technologies at a scale and in the time frames needed for stabilization – and to do so using new structures outside the existing institutions. This is a joint paper with the Meridian Institute and the Center for European Policy Studies.

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Source: Clean Energy Group
File Format: PDF


Boosting Productivity, Innovation, and Growth through a National Innovation Foundation

By Robert Atkinson, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program and Howard Wial, Senior Research Associate, Metropolitan Policy Program, The Brookings Institution. April 2008.

This new report from The Brookings Insitution details how "innovation drives America’s economic growth and ultimately determines its living standards and those of its metropolitan areas. However, the nation faces a growing innovation challenge in today’s global economy. To respond, the federal government should establish a National Innovation Foundation (NIF)—a new, nimble, lean, and collaborative entity devoted to supporting firms and other organizations in their innovative activities. By enhancing America’s world-class entrepreneurial and market environment, NIF would boost the nation’s innovation leadership for the 21st century and raise productivity and incomes. Moreover, by supporting workforce development and performance improvement in firms, NIF would help create better jobs for high school graduates in manufacturing and “low tech” services as well as those with advanced degrees in high technology industries."

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File Format: PDF
Source: The Brookings Institution


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.

 


Consultative Group on Climate Innovation (CGCI): A Proposed Complementary Technology Track for the Post-2012 Period

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Lewis Milford, Clean Energy Group, November 2007. Discussion paper to be presented at the Road to Copenhagen 2009 Conference on Leadership, Sustainable Development and Climate Change, Brussels, Belgium.

This paper proposes a new global architecture and strategy for climate technology innovaiton for the post-2012 framework.


Climate Technology Innovation: A Post-2012 Climate Framework

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Lewis Milford, Clean Energy Group, October 2007. Presentation to the European Climate Platform, Brussels.

ECP Seminar - Strategic Aspects of Technology for the UNFCCC and Climate Change Debate: The post-Bali technology agenda, October 3, 2007.


Building an Agricultural Research for Development System in Africa

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Adiel N. Mbabu and Cosmas Ochieng, ISNAR Divsion Discussion Paper 8, October 2006.

This paper, prepared by the International Service for National Agriculture Research Divsion, discusses how impact-oriented agricultural research for development systems in Africa can be better organized and managed. Specifically, the paper puts forth the argument that achieving the development targets set by African leaders and the international community, for example, through the Millennium Development Goals, will be extremely difficult without a satisfactory re-orientation of the organization and management of African research for development systems. Such a re-orientation involves carefully linking the agricultural research agenda with national development priorities; improving coordination, interaction, interlinkages, partnerships, and networks among system agents—that is, agricultural research institutes, extension systems, higher education institutions, farmer organizations, civil society, and the private sector—and finding innovative financing and resourcing mechanisms to support the numerous components of the system.


Interaction Between Innovation Systems and Policy-Making Processes

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Tim Foxon, 4CMR, University of Cambridge 


Open Source Models of Collaborative Innovation in the Life Sciences

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Todd Barker, Meridian Institute. Multi-Party Problem Solving (e.g. dialogues, roundtables, workshops)
International, Bellagio 2005 Meeting Summary: May 2005 - Nov 2005.


The Role of Clusters in Knowledge Creation and Diffusion - An Institutional Perspective

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Michael Steiner, Department of Economics, University of Graz. August 2004. 44th European Congress of the European Regional Science Association.


Understanding and Modeling Technological Change

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IPCC Special Report on Emissions, Chapter 3.4.5. March 2000.

Authors: Nebojsa Nakicenovic, Joseph Alcamo, Gerald Davis, Bert de Vries, Joergen Fenhann, Stuart Gaffin, Kenneth Gregory, Arnulf Grübler, Tae Yong Jung, Tom Kram, Emilio Lebre La Rovere, Laurie Michaelis, Shunsuke Mori, Tsuneyuki Morita, William Pepper, Hugh Pitcher, Lynn Price, Keywan Riahi, Alexander Roehrl, Hans-Holger Rogner, Alexei Sankovski, Michael Schlesinger, Priyadarshi Shukla, Steven Smith, Robert Swart, Sascha van Rooijen, Nadejda Victor, Zhou Dadi


Investing in Innovation: Creating a Research and Innovation Policy that Works

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Lewis M. Branscomb and James H. Keller, Eds. (1998). This book offers commentary on the science-innovation-technology interplay and the role of government.