Event Title
Legal Preparedness for the Global Green Economy
Location
Ceremonial Mootcourt Room
Start Date
4-7-2012 1:15 PM
End Date
4-7-2012 2:45 PM
Description
As argued in the 2011 UN Green Economy Report, the world currently faces an important opportunity to move from current resource depleting, polluting and wasteful forms of economic growth to a new, low-carbon, sustainable green economy. New markets and industries are emerging, for clean renewable energy, environmental goods and services, local organic agriculture, and payment for ecosystem services. International economic law is evolving rapidly, and could foster rather than frustrate this shift. With more than 350 trade treaties, over 2,700 investment accords, new international disputes on resources, environment and development issues, and regimes like the UN Climate Convention Cancun Agreement or the UN Biodiversity Convention Nagoya Protocol adopting new economic instruments, it remains somewhat unclear how international rules can guide governments and markets.
Canada, the EU and many developing country partners have committed to sustainable development globally. They are actively negotiating new Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) & Foreign Investment Protection Agreements (FIPAs). In preparation for the 2012 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UN CSD), where countries will report their progress in developing policies and laws for the green economy, this paper aims to advance our international understanding of opportunities, challenges and also limits of law and policy instruments to support development of a global green economy.
The project builds on my SSHRC research and outreach project for Sustainable Prosperity where I analyzed the international economic legal framework for market-based instruments (MBIs) supplemented by case studies of actual experiences with environmental pricing reform measures for low-carbon development, also forest ecosystems and biodiversity stewardship. I explained how the rules of WTO legal regime (including recent dispute settlement outcomes) have a profound impact on MBIs. I have also been awarded a SSHRC workshop grant and aim to share some of the workshop results with IUCN members in July.
This research builds upon previous studies published in my recent work with Kluwer Law International- Sustainable Development in World Trade Law and in Sustainable Development in World Investment Law.
Legal Preparedness for the Global Green Economy
Ceremonial Mootcourt Room
As argued in the 2011 UN Green Economy Report, the world currently faces an important opportunity to move from current resource depleting, polluting and wasteful forms of economic growth to a new, low-carbon, sustainable green economy. New markets and industries are emerging, for clean renewable energy, environmental goods and services, local organic agriculture, and payment for ecosystem services. International economic law is evolving rapidly, and could foster rather than frustrate this shift. With more than 350 trade treaties, over 2,700 investment accords, new international disputes on resources, environment and development issues, and regimes like the UN Climate Convention Cancun Agreement or the UN Biodiversity Convention Nagoya Protocol adopting new economic instruments, it remains somewhat unclear how international rules can guide governments and markets.
Canada, the EU and many developing country partners have committed to sustainable development globally. They are actively negotiating new Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) & Foreign Investment Protection Agreements (FIPAs). In preparation for the 2012 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UN CSD), where countries will report their progress in developing policies and laws for the green economy, this paper aims to advance our international understanding of opportunities, challenges and also limits of law and policy instruments to support development of a global green economy.
The project builds on my SSHRC research and outreach project for Sustainable Prosperity where I analyzed the international economic legal framework for market-based instruments (MBIs) supplemented by case studies of actual experiences with environmental pricing reform measures for low-carbon development, also forest ecosystems and biodiversity stewardship. I explained how the rules of WTO legal regime (including recent dispute settlement outcomes) have a profound impact on MBIs. I have also been awarded a SSHRC workshop grant and aim to share some of the workshop results with IUCN members in July.
This research builds upon previous studies published in my recent work with Kluwer Law International- Sustainable Development in World Trade Law and in Sustainable Development in World Investment Law.