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China and the Challenge of Global Climate Change: Law and
Policy
Hanenburg-Yntema Fonds – Leuven - 25 March 2011
Prof Geert Van Calster
Leuven law /King’s College /Monash
[email protected]
Overview of Presentation
• Intro
• Sovereignty: the starting point (and nec
plus ultra?) of international environmental
law
• CBDR, and links to Sustainable
development
• China - internal
Intro
• There are three kinds of lies: Lies, damn
lies, and statistics
– The Rt.Hon. Benjamin Disraeli [?] Sir Charles
Wentworth Dilke [?]
Sovereignty
• Principle 2 of the Rio Declaration:
– States have, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations
and the principles of international law, the sovereign right to exploit
their own resources pursuant to their own environmental and
developmental policies, and the responsibility to ensure that
activities within their jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to
the environment of other States or of areas beyond the limits of
jurisdiction.
• 'Pollution knows no borders'?
• 'Common concern of mankind' [cf 'Common
heritage of mankind' or 'global commons']:
a new legal principle or blurb?
CBDR, and links to SD
• Principle 7 Rio Declaration:
– States shall cooperate in a spirit of global partnership to conserve,
protect and restore the health and integrity of the Earth's ecosystem.
In view of the different contributions to global environmental
degradation, States have common but differentiated responsibilities.
The developed countries acknowledge the responsibility that they bear
in the international pursuit of sustainable development in view of the
pressures their societies place on the global environment and of the
technologies and financial resources they command.
CBDR: Historic responsibility
CBDR: Current responsibility
Source: Guardian and US EIA, 2009 data
• Links to 'sustainable development', which
effectively combines trade and economic
development with its two best-known
negative externalities: environment, and
social protection
• If one country does not internalise these,
can we do it for them? See WTO /trade
issues
China - Internal
China - Internal
• From command and control via 'market-based'
(including environmental agreements, benchmarking,
top runner initiatives) to somewhere in the middle?
Conclusion
China and the Challenge of Global Climate Change: Law and
Policy
Hanenburg-Yntema Fonds – Leuven - 25 March 2011
Prof Geert Van Calster
Leuven law /King’s College /Monash
[email protected]