From relative obscurity in the late 1980s when it was first discussed in the UN General Assembly, the issue of climate change has come, less than three decades later, to be characterized as ‘the defining human development challenge for the twenty first century’. In the decades that the international community has spent in search of a solution to climate change, climate science has gained in certainty, media attention has grown exponentially, and climate consciousness has acquired salience among the political classes. This was in evidence at the Copenhagen Climate Conference, 2009, that attracted 125 heads of state and government, the largest such gathering in the history of the United Nations, and nearly 40,000 participants. No collective challenge facing humanity has ever before attracted such attention, participation and political capital, yet the international community could not resolve its differences and arrive at a definitive formula to address climate change. At the root of the differences are differing self-serving visions of burden sharing among states.
In the early years, the negotiations focused, given the greater contribution of developed countries to the climate change problem as well as their enhanced capacity on generating greenhouse gas mitigation targets, timetables, and compliance mechanisms for developed countries. The gaze has shifted in recent years to the role that developing countries, in particular the more advanced among them, can and should play in addressing climate change. This shift is accompanied by a larger crisis in the climate regime precipitated in part by the United States’ rejection of the Kyoto Protocol, and consequent efforts by other developed countries to transition to a less prescriptive regime that could prove attractive to the United States. These two trends are together likely to lead to a future regime that is less prescriptive for all countries, and therefore has a limited role for compliance systems, whether for developed or developing countries. Nevertheless there are several tools and techniques, short of a fully fledged compliance system, that may be useful in ensuring that states are in compliance with their obligations. This chapter examines the tools and techniques in the climate regime as they relate to developing countries.
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