RealTime Economic Issues Watch
The Peterson Institute for International Economics is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan
research institution devoted to the study of international economic policy. More › ›
Subscribe to North Korea: Witness to Transformation Search

RealTime Economic Issues Watch

In RealTime posts, PIIE senior staff and colleagues discuss the fast-moving economic news, financial developments, and public policy choices confronting the United States and the world.

Archive: Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

The Challenge of Climate Change (in One Chart)

by Arvind Subramanian | March 14th, 2013 | 09:30 am

Is the world making progress on climate change? Recently, the OECD [pdf] struck a hopeful note, reporting that emissions were growing more slowly than GDP in both the high-income and developing countries, including China. This decoupling of emissions and growth, if true, would be good news indeed, since it would suggest that the world can [...]

Read full post

US Power Sector Meets 2020 Climate Change Target—for a Month

by Trevor Houser | May 11th, 2012 | 02:21 pm

At the United Nations climate change conference in Copenhagen in 2009, the United States committed to cut greenhouse gas emissions 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020—a target included in cap-and-trade legislation that had passed the House of Representatives earlier that year. With the death of cap-and-trade in the Senate and the Republican takeover of [...]

Read full post

Dissecting Durban: A Fighting Chance for Progress on Climate Change

by Trevor Houser | December 16th, 2011 | 10:00 am

Reactions to the results of the annual UN climate change conference that wrapped up last week in South Africa have been all over the map. The AP heralded the outcome as a “landmark deal,” The New York Times and Reuters called it “modest.” And the always astute Michael Levi at the Council on Foreign Relations [...]

Read full post

Less Can Be More: Protecting Cancun’s Fragile Victory

by Trevor Houser | December 15th, 2010 | 10:48 am

The diplomats who gathered in Mexico for the annual UN climate change negotiations in early December surprised everyone, including themselves, when they announced at the end of their session that a deal had been reached. Expectations going into the summit were at rock bottom following the chaos and discord of the Copenhagen meeting one year [...]

Read full post

Does Capping Carbon Really Help US Energy Security?

by Trevor Houser | July 19th, 2010 | 04:41 pm

In the wake of the Gulf oil spill, Senate Democrats are gearing up to bring an energy bill to the floor next week in the hopes of improving the safety of offshore oil production and beginning to wean the country off fossil fuels. The biggest outstanding question surrounding the draft legislation is whether it will [...]

Read full post

Simulating the Effects of the American Power Act (Kerry-Lieberman) on Energy Security

by Trevor Houser | June 17th, 2010 | 02:15 pm

Adapted from a June 15 posting on the Council on Foreign Relations website. A couple weeks ago, Michael Levi wrote about the Chamber of Commerce’s new Energy Security Risk Index and raised the question of “how various energy and climate bills being debated in Congress score” on the index. We have now done that analysis [...]

Read full post

CBO Stumbles into the Green Jobs Debate

by Trevor Houser | May 7th, 2010 | 09:40 am

On May 5, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released an issue brief titled “How Policies to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions Could Affect Employment” [pdf]. With unemployment hovering stubbornly around 10 percent, the report could shape the Senate’s appetite for taking up the energy and climate change bill being drafted by Senators Kerry, Graham, and Lieberman. [...]

Read full post

European Carbon Tax? European Monetary Fund? It Could Be a Marriage Made in Crisis Heaven

by Jacob Funk Kirkegaard | March 11th, 2010 | 10:28 am

Lacking the policy instruments to deal with Greece and other economic crises, some in Europe have floated the idea of a European Monetary Fund (EMF) as an institutionalized “European solution” to such situations. However, any new EU or—more likely—eurozone institution faces some formidable political obstacles, which rule out an EMF as a short-term solution to [...]

Read full post

Evaluating Copenhagen: Does the Accord Meet the Challenge?

by Trevor Houser | February 4th, 2010 | 05:13 pm

Now that the dust has settled from the climate change conference in Copenhagen last December, it’s a good time to step back and take stock. Policymakers and the public had high expectations for the summit and its conclusion left many confused and disappointed. But while the meeting did not reach consensus among all 192 countries [...]

Read full post

Reconciling Climate Change Goals with the Needs of Developing Countries

by Arvind Subramanian | December 14th, 2009 | 02:55 pm

How should climate change goals be met to ensure that developing countries’ energy needs are not sacrificed? In a previous posting on RealTime Economic Issues, Meera Fickling offered a different view on an issue posed earlier by Nancy Birdsall and me in our article “Forget Emissions, Focus on Research” in the Financial Times. In this [...]

Read full post