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Key Message

By 2030, the world's energy needs are expected to be 50 per cent greater than today. At the same time, scientists are calling for a 25 per cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 to avoid serious changes in the Earth's climate system. Reconciling these demands while simultaneously adapting to the impacts of climate change is one of the fundamental challenges of the 21st century.

Team


John Drexhage· John Drexhage
Director - Climate Change and Energy
Aaron Cosbey· Aaron Cosbey
Associate and Senior Climate Change and Trade Advisor
Anne Hammill· Anne Hammill
Senior Researcher
David Sawyer· David Sawyer
Associate
Deborah Murphy· Deborah Murphy
Associate
Dennis Cunningham· Dennis Cunningham
Project Officer
Dennis Tirpak· Dennis Tirpak
Associate
Frédéric Gagnon-Lebrun· Frédéric Gagnon-Lebrun
Associate
Graham Ashford· Graham Ashford
Associate
Jean Nolet· Jean Nolet
Associate
Jiahua Pan· Jiahua Pan
Associate
Jo-Ellen Parry· Jo-Ellen Parry
Manager, Climate Change and Energy
Peter Dickey· Peter Dickey
Associate
Peter Wooders· Peter Wooders
Senior Economist
Philip Gass· Philip Gass
Project Officer
Rochelle Harding· Rochelle Harding
Associate

Climate Change and Energy

Supporting the transition to a clean, secure and sustainable future

What's New in Climate Change and Energy?

  • Microfinance and Climate Change Adaptation (PDF - 95 kb)
    Can microfinance services (MFS) be used to support adaptation to climate change? Anne Hammill, Richard Matthew and Elissa McCarter explore this question in the paper "Microfinance and Climate Change Adaptation" published by the Institute for Development Studies. They suggest that MFS can play an important role in vulnerability reduction and climate change adaptation among some of the poor, provided services better match client needs and livelihoods.

  • Webcast The International Institute for Sustainable Development and The Earth Institute at Columbia University presented an important discussion on climate change: "The Kyoto Mechanisms: Key to combating climate change?" on October 9, 2008. The panel featured Jeffrey Sachs and Yvo de Boer, with Henry Derwent and Klaus S. Lackner, and was moderated by John Drexhage, IISD's Director of Climate Change and Energy. An online video of the event is available.

  • Biofuels - At What Cost? Government support for biodiesel in Malaysia (PDF - 1 mb)
    This report written by Gregore Pio Lopez and Tara Laan provides a detailed assessment of government intervention in the biodiesel market in Malaysia. It also analyses the role of government support for biofuels-both in Malaysia and internationally-on social and environmental outcomes in Malaysia.

  • "The Numbers Game" (PDF - 430 kb) in Forced Migration Review
    Written by Oli Brown, this article highlights the need for better data collection and numerical forecasting in order to more accurately estimate the numbers of future forced climate migrants. This information is critical to planning for what is widely viewed as one of the major impacts of climate change. "The Numbers Game" is one of 37 articles contained in the October issue of Forced Migration Review looking at climate change and displacement.

  • Climate Change and Trade: Issues in perspective (PDF - 700 kb)
    In June 2008, IISD collaborated with the Government of Denmark, the German Marshall Fund and the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development to convene a major seminar on trade and climate change in Copenhagen. The event's summary remarks and six finalized background papers are now available.

  • A Way Forward: Canadian Perspectives on Post-2012 Climate Policy (PDF - 2 mb)
    Published in May 2008
    This report assesses the four pillars of a post-2012 climate regime—mitigation, adaptation, technology, and financing and investment—from a Canadian perspective. These issues form the basis of the Bali Action Plan and have emerged as critical components to post-Bali discussions. The analysis aims to help set the groundwork for discussions in Canada and internationally, examining how these key areas may be incorporated in a post-2012 agreement, in light of Canadian interests and perspectives.

We stand at a crossroads. The decisions made by national governments, business leaders and individuals today will determine the extent of global climate change and the capacity of communities and countries to adapt to its impacts.

Decisions related to the future production and use of energy will be especially critical. For the two billion people living without modern energy services, an increase in energy production is necessary to meet basic human needs. Energy is also required to fuel economic development and to achieve and maintain a healthy standard of living in all countries. Over the next quarter-century, trillions of dollars will be invested in new energy infrastructure, particularly in developing countries. The energy mix selected and technology used will have a profound impact on our progress toward a sustainable future that includes low emissions of greenhouse gases.

The effects of a warming world are already being felt around the world. Sea ice in the Arctic is thinning and disappearing. Glaciers are melting at unprecedented rates, disrupting downstream river flows. Rising seas are flooding low-lying areas, particularly affecting Pacific Island states. Extreme weather events—increased rainfall, droughts and floods—are becoming more frequent. To avoid serious disruption to the Earth's climatic system, it is projected that global average temperatures should not be allowed to increase by more than two to three degrees Celsius. Yet if the rate of greenhouse gas emissions remain at current levels, the world could face an increase in average temperature of between three to 10 degrees Celsius.

The challenge before the international community is therefore clear—how will we meet global energy needs and development aspirations while reducing greenhouse gas emissions and responding to current and future climatic changes? The integration of climate change considerations into development priorities; creative responses based on solid research; knowledge-sharing; and urgent actions are all required to meet this challenge.

IISD is dedicated to identifying and promoting innovative solutions that support the transition to a clean, secure and sustainable future. Our approach seeks to bring together developing and developed country issues; corporate and social needs; energy and environment priorities; mitigation and adaptation strategies; and economic, social and environmental well-being. Actively engaged in the international climate change arena since the signing of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, IISD's unique perspective and effectiveness have earned the institute recognition as an international and national leader in climate change policy research.

Members of IISD's Climate Change and Energy team seek to facilitate the exchange of ideas and perspectives by engaging key decision-makers and policy influencers in critical discussions nationally and internationally. Within Canada, members of IISD's team provide expert advice and consultation to federal government departments and the Province of Manitoba, and are becoming more actively engaged with a number of other provincial governments, including Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia. IISD also has a growing list of clients in the private sector, including some of Canada's leading energy companies, for whom we provide internal services as well as external consulting.

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