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China’s Way to Carbon Emissions Reduction: The Choice of Regulatory Instruments and its Legal Challenges (eBook)


ISBN13: 9789041160522
Published: September 2015
Publisher: Kluwer Law International
Country of Publication: The Netherlands
Format: eBook (ePub)
Price: £227.00
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Now that the most recent scientific estimates have shown that China has become the world’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, China’s influence on the world’s environment and sustainable development highlights the importance of tailoring Chinese climate change law to conform with the requirements of international conventions and agreements on climate change. This thorough analysis, based on an examination of climate status, legal background, and current regulatory systems in China, examines the potential role of different policy instruments in reducing carbon emissions in order to find an appropriate choice for China, and recommends approaches to key issues for relevant authorities.

The author conducts a comprehensive and in-depth study on the three mainstream environmental policy instruments used to control carbon emissions – the cap-and-trade system, the carbon tax, and commandand- control regulations – in a Chinese context. She reviews China’s current policies, and elucidates how the issues of climate change and global warming call for social, environmental, economic, and legal reforms in China, especially in the areas of administrative law and property rights law. Among the issues and topics covered are the following:

  • key issues on designing and implementing each of the three policy instruments;
  • effectiveness of China’s implementation of its international obligations;
  • comparison of China’s seven regional pilot emissions trading scheme (ETS) programmes with the well-established EU ETS;
  • legal challenges from China’s current administrative legislation and the definition of carbon emissions entitlement;
  • linkage between China’s ETS and other ETSs from a global perspective;
  • monitoring, reporting, and verification concerns;
  • lessons learned from schemes implemented in the United States and Australia;
  • practical effect of China’s climate change policy at the national, provincial, and local levels; and
  • future direction of an emerging carbon market in China.
The analysis assesses the critical costs and benefits of each approach in the context of selected case studies, taking legal literature in the field fully into account. Given that the Chinese government is taking steps to reduce emissions by altering energy production and usage and is signalling a willingness to make similar commitments in a multilateral treaty, it is very timely and important for lawmakers and scholars, within and outside China, to think about new and appropriate regulatory measures to respond to the crisis and plan for a sustainable future. This study provides not only a useful benchmark for both China and other countries in formulating initiatives on enhancing climate protection, but also details the global implications for governments and for international organizations concerned with the understanding between China and the rest of the world in the context of climate change mitigation.

Subjects:
Environmental Law, Other Jurisdictions , eBooks, China
Contents:
Introduction

Part I Environmental Policy Instruments Used for the Control of Carbon Emissions
Chapter 1 Market-Based Environmental Policy Instrument: The Cap-and-Trade System
Chapter 2 The Quasi-Market-Based Environmental Policy Instrument: Carbon Tax
Chapter 3 Centralized Environmental Policy Instrument: Command-and-Control Regulation

Part II Status QUO of Environmental Policies and Legislation Concerning Climate Change in China
Chapter 4 Chinese Environmental Policies on Climate Change and Sustainable Development
Chapter 5 China’s Efforts on Environmental Legislation
Chapter 6 Emerging Carbon Market in China

Part III China’s Way to Reduce Carbon Emissions: Regulatory Choice, Legal Challenges and the Carbon Market Outlook
Chapter 7 Choice of Regulatory Instruments to Control Carbon Emissions in China
Chapter 8 Legal Challenges to Implementing an ETS in China
Chapter 9 Carbon Market Outlook: The Possible Linkage between China’s ETS and Other ETSs