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- Energie-, Verkehrs- und Klimapolitik (1625) (remove)
Der Verkehrssektor ist keineswegs der einzige, jedoch ein wesentlicher Verursacher der Klimaprobleme. Der Automobilverkehr als traditioneller Hauptbelaster im Verkehrsbereich zeigt zwar vergleichsweise positive Tendenzen, trotzdem ist auch hier noch erheblicher weiterer Handlungsbedarf gegeben. Das Wuppertal Institut hat hier in übersichtlicher und systematischer Form Stand und Perspektiven zusammengetragen. Nach einer ausführlichen Einbettung in den Klimadiskurs erfolgt die schrittweise Konzentration auf den PKW-Verkehr Deutschlands. Für diesen Bereich werden im Detail die denkbaren technischen Ansätze und die möglichen Umsetzungsmaßnahmen erörtert.
Energieeinsparung ist angesagt - auch in öffentlichen Gebäuden. Das größte Problem für eine Umsetzung des vernünftigen Gedankens stellt zumeist der öffentliche Haushalt dar, denn eine energetische Sanierung will finanziert sein und die Kassen sind leer. Für mehrere Schulgebäude in Nordrhein-Westfalen wird seit einigen Jahren mit Erfolg ein Finanzierungsmodell angewandt, das privates Kapital einsetzt. Interessierte Bürgerinnen und Bürger investieren in Solar- und Sparmaßnahmen und erhalten im Verlauf der Projektlaufzeit über die realisierten Energiekosteneinsparungen ihr Kapital (plus Rendite) zurück. Die erfolgreichen "Solar&Spar"-Pilotprojekte des Wuppertal Instituts zeigen inzwischen, dass der Modellversuch praxistauglich ist.
In the long term, any definition of adequacy consistent with UNFCCC Article 2 will require increased mitigation efforts from almost all countries. Therefore, an expansion of emission limitation commitments will form a central element of any future architecture of the climate regime. This expansion has two elements: deepening of quantitative commitments for Annex B countries and the adoption of commitments for those countries outside of the current limitation regime. This article seeks to provide a more analytical basis for further differentiation among non-Annex I countries. To be both fair and reflective of national circumstances, it is based on the criteria of responsibility, capability and potential to mitigate. Altogether, non-Annex I countries were differentiated in four groups, each including countries with similar national circumstances: newly industrialized countries (NICs), rapidly industrializing countries (RIDCs), ‘other developing countries’, and least developed countries (LDCs). Based on the same criteria that were used for differentiating among non-Annex I countries, a set of decision rules was developed to assign mitigation and financial transfer commitments to each group of countries (including Annex I countries). Applying these decision rules results in (strict) reduction commitments for Annex I countries, but also implies quantifiable mitigation obligations for NICs and RIDCs, assisted by financial transfers from the North. Other developing countries are obliged to take qualitative commitments, but quantifiable mitigation commitments for these countries and the LDC group would be not justifiable. As national circumstances in countries evolve over time, the composition of the groups will change according to agreed triggers.
Die Arbeit befasst sich mit der Frage, wie das Leitbild einer Nachhaltigen Entwicklung in die Kommunalverwaltungen integriert werden kann. Nach einer Erläuterung des Nachhaltigkeitskonzepts, gefolgt von einer strukturationstheoretischen Analyse der kommunalen Verwaltung, ergibt die Untersuchung der strukturellen und prozessualen Rahmenbedingungen, dass die für Nachhaltigkeitsprojekte so wichtige querschnittsorientierte Zusammenarbeit nur sehr erschwert möglich ist. Das Kernhindernis liegt in der fachlich abgetrennten Organisationsstruktur. Die bisherige Verwaltungsmodernisierung hat hier wenig Verbesserung gebracht, standen doch gleichermaßen betriebswirtschaftliche wie binnenorientierte Instrumente im Vordergrund. Notwendig ist, dass sich Verwaltungen stärker strategisch ausrichten, um die Qualität des Outputs auch im Sinne der Nachhaltigkeitsidee zu verbessern. Hierzu werden einige Ansätze wie Strategisches Management, Projektgruppenarbeit, Mitarbeitermotivation, Aus- und Fortbildung u.a.) vorgestellt. Gestützt werden die Thesen durch einen Empirieteil. Es wurden Leitfaden gestützte Interviews, eine Fragebogenaktion und zwei Expertenworkshops durchgeführt.
This article presents the findings of a European study on energy efficiency in the public sector, entitled "Public procurement of Energy Saving Technologies in Europe" (PROST), completed in 2003. Energy efficiency in the public sector goes far beyond energy savings and climate protection. Energy efficiency must be seen as a strategy, which deals both with scarce public funds and with profound energy and climate challenges. The gains to be made are substantial. The study assessed the potential for energy and cost savings and the greenhouse gas reductions that are linked to energy efficiency in the European public sector. To the knowledge of the authors, this is the first time such an analysis has been carried out. The study concluded that there are no fundamental legal obstacles that would a priori disable the public sector from procuring energy efficient technologies or applying energy efficiency considerations in its daily building management routines. However, at the level of implementation obstacles can occur. It is therefore of paramount importance that there is sufficient political will and adequate incentive systems at all relevant levels. It appeared to be particularly effective when public procurement is energy-efficiency minded in all its operations and life cycle costing is applied for investments instead of conventional public budgeting procedures. The study demonstrates that consistent and EU-wide application of these principles and instruments can result in rather substantial savings both in terms of energy and in terms of money. With additional annual investments in energy efficiency of 80 million Euro, energy savings in the (EU15) Member States' public sector worth up to 12 billion Euro per year can be achieved. A supplementary analysis was performed for a selection of the new Member States, which indicated that the potential for energy and fiscal savings is substantial in those countries as well.
Klima: Kyoto lebt
(2006)
Vom 28. November bis 10. Dezember 2005 fand im kanadischen Montreal die 11. Klimakonferenz (COP 11) statt. Doch diesmal kamen nicht nur die Vertragsstaaten der Klimarahmenkonvention zusammen, sondern es traten gleichzeitig und erstmalig auch die mittlerweile 156 Mitgliedsstaaten des Kyoto-Protokolls zusammen (COP/MOP 1). Neben letzten Weichenstellungen für dessen Umsetzung ging es in Montreal insbesondere darum, Verhandlungen über die Fortentwicklung der Kyoto-Verpflichtungen auf den Weg zu bringen. Ein Anlass, um Bilanz zu ziehen.
After two weeks of negotiations, climate diplomats completed the implementation of the Protocol, refined some of its instruments for implementation and agreed on processes for moving forward beyond the first Kyoto commitment period. The report by the Wuppertal Institute provides an overview and assessment of the agreements reached in Montreal.
Das Forschungsvorhaben leistet einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Verbesserung des nationalen Emissionsinventars. Ziel ist die lückenlose Erfassung des Einsatzes von Sekundärbrennstoffen in einzelnen Sektoren des Verarbeitenden Gewerbes und die Bereitstellung geeigneter Emissionsfaktoren zur Berechnung der Emissionen. Die dem UBA bislang nur teilweise vorliegenden Informationen zum Einsatz von Sekundärbrennstoffen in den Branchen Zementindustrie, Kalkindustrie, Stahlindustrie und Papierindustrie wurden in enger Kooperation mit den jeweiligen Wirtschaftsverbänden systematisch gesichtet, durch Schätzungen vervollständigt und in Form von Datenzeitreihen (von 1990 bis 2004) für die Inventardatenbank ZSE nutzbar gemacht. Ergänzt werden die nach Brennstoffkategorien differenzierten Massenströme um geeignete Emissionsfaktoren für Kohlendioxid und sog. Split-Faktoren, die den Anteil biogenen Kohlenstoffs am Gesamtgehalt angeben.
This paper introduces the special issue on the Policies for Ecological Tax Reform: Assessment of Social Responses (PETRAS) project about responses to ecological tax reform (ETR) in Europe. Although ETR is widely accepted to be a policy with desirable effects, its implementation has been limited by problems of political acceptability. The project aimed to address the question of how to make such a policy more acceptable. It is the first study to examine in depth the thinking of members of the general public about the ETR policies and is also the first international comparative study of the thinking of ordinary business people about ETR policies. The PETRAS project methodology was based around the use of interviews and focus groups to inform the assessment of social responses to ETR policies and the development of improved designs for them. A number of issues emerged relating to awareness, trust, understanding of the purpose, visibility, incentives, regressivity, levels of taxation, terminology, communication about ETR and the use of alternative instruments. Together with these similarities, a pattern of differences between the countries can also be seen. The final section of this paper introduces the national studies described in the following papers.
Grave concerns with the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) have increasingly surfaced in the international climate policy arena. The sectoral approaches described in this paper may be a way to address some of the shortcomings of this Kyoto mechanism. The paper outlines the criticisms that have been raised against the CDM as well as the conflicting interpretations of a sectoral approach and examines in how far it might resolve the mechanism’s perceived shortcomings. Furthermore, it outlines issues that need to be resolved when implementing a sectoral approach: distributing costs and benefits, defining the sector and its baseline, ensuring additionality and tackling procedural issues. A sectoral approach can enable countries to guide their structural development but it also opens up a gap between public and private investment that needs to be addressed before conflicts arise. Sectoral CDM activities may be able to lower transaction costs for projects that otherwise cannot compete in the CDM market and might even pave the way to sectoral greenhouse gas limitation targets in developing countries by establishing the necessary infrastructure for data collection. However, a sectoral CDM cannot be mistaken for a panacea. Some of the mechanism's problems remain, which highlights the need to establish additional instruments to support Southern countries in furthering sustainable development and embarking on a low-emission trajectory.
Das Forschungsvorhaben leistet einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Verbesserung des nationalen Emissionsinventars. Im Bereich der Rohstoffemissionen konnten identifizierte Lücken aus der Nutzung von Kalkstein geschlossen werden. Sämtliche Einsätze von Kalkstein und Kalk in Wirtschaftszweigen, ihre Emissionsrelevanz sowie Berücksichtigung im deutschen Emissionsinventar wurden analysiert und für relevante Bilanzposten die Einsätze von Kalkstein und Kalk ermittelt. Neu in 2006 ins Inventar aufgenommene Bilanzposten wurden mit sämtlichen Detaildaten, die zur Neu-Implementierung des kompletten Zeitreihensatzes im Inventar erforderlich waren, zur Verfügung gestellt. Die Kalkstein- und Kalkbilanz für Deutschland wurde vollständig abgebildet. Die Emissionen für das Basisjahr 1990, die mit der Berichterstattung 2006 endgültig festgelegt worden sind, wurden um gut 3,5 Millionen Tonnen Kohlendioxid angepasst. Die Vollständigkeit des Inventars konnte damit erhöht werden.
Women and transport : study
(2006)
Options and potentials for energy end-use efficiency and energy services : summary ; final report
(2006)
COP 10 vervollständigt CDM, bringt aber keine neue Bewegung in die internationale Klimapolitik
(2005)
Klimagipfel in Buenos Aires
(2005)
The first Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (MOP 1) took place from 28 November to 10 December 2005 in Montreal, in conjunction with the eleventh meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 11). This meeting signifies a successful start into a new era of international climate policy: The Kyoto Protocol, which in the past had been sometimes declared as being dead, has become operational.
The challenges of the meeting were framed along the "Three Is", Implementation, Improvement and Innovation. The first challenge (Implementation) entailed in particular the adoption of the Marrakesh Accords, the agreements reached at COP 7 in Marrakesh that set out the detailed rules for making the Kyoto Protocol operational. The second challenge (Improvement) referred to improving the work of the Framework Convention and the Kyoto Protocol in the near future. The third and most important challenge (Innovation) referred to the further evolution of the regime.
This article by Bettina Wittneben, Wolfgang Sterk, Hermann E. Ott und Bernd Brouns provides an account of the main developments in Montreal along the lines of the "Three Is". The paper concludes with an assessment and outlook on international climate policy.
Using natural gas for fuel releases less carbon dioxide per unit of energy produced than burning oil or coal, but its production and transport are accompanied by emissions of methane, which is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide in the short term. This calls into question whether climate forcing could be reduced by switching from coal and oil to natural gas. We have made measurements in Russia along the world's largest gas-transport system and find that methane leakage is in the region of 1.4%, which is considerably less than expected and comparable to that from systems in the United States. Our calculations indicate that using natural gas in preference to other fossil fuels could be useful in the short term for mitigating climate change.
Additional binding reduction targets for greenhouse gases are necessary and they must also apply to important developing and transition countries. So far, these countries have been treated as a uniform group. In future, different rules will have to be used according to varying capabilities and different exposures to risk. A team of 14 researchers from
rich and poor countries puts forward proposals on how to proceed.
CDM und nachhaltige Energieversorgung in Lateinamerika : Experten-Workshop diskutiert Perspektiven
(2005)
Target 2020 : policies and measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the EU ; final report
(2005)
In this brochure, WISIONS focuses on the significance of innovative strategies in the field of sustainable tourism. WISIONS presents projects from Tanzania, Germany, Ecuador, Switzerland and Ghana that have been successfully implemented, with the intention of further promoting the particular approaches used by these projects. Using a key number of internationally accepted criteria, the main consideration for the selection of the projects was energy and resource efficiency, but social aspects such as the inclusion of local population were also of relevance. The assessment of the projects also included the consideration of regional factors acknowledging different needs and potentials.
Addressing opportunities and challenges of a sectoral approach to the Clean Development Mechanism
(2005)
Vorteil für Erdgas
(2005)
Under the framework of the UN framework convention on climate change (UNFCCC) and its Kyoto Protocol the targets and strategies for the second and third commitment period ("post-2012") have to be discussed and set in the near future. Regarding the substantial emission reductions that have to be shouldered by the industrialized nations over the next two decades it is evident that all available potentials to mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have to be harnessed and that energy efficiency has to play a key role.
To substantiate this we developed a comprehensive scenario analysis of the EU 25s energy system and other greenhouse gas emissions until 2020. Our analysis shows which key potentials to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions are available, by which policies and measures they are attainable
and which will be benefits of greenhouse gas mitigation measures.
By this analysis we show the mayor role of energy efficiency in all sectors and all member states. We demonstrate that a reduction of EU 25 greenhouse gas emissions by more than 30 % by 2020 is feasible, reasonable and - to a large extent - cost effective. We also develop a comprehensive policy package necessary to achieve ambitious Post-Kyoto targets.
The scenario analysis results in a clear identification of the needed strategies, policies and measures and especially the relevance of energy efficiency to achieve the necessary ambitious greenhouse gas reduction targets. It also clearly shows the costs and the benefits of such a policy compared to a business as usual case.
The German climate change programme (2000) identified the residential sector as one of the main sectors in which to achieve additional GHG reductions. Our case study compiles results of existing evaluations of the key policies and measures that were planned and introduced and carries out some own estimates of achievements. We show, which emission reductions and which instruments where planned and what was delivered until 2004.
Legal instruments such as the revised building code were introduced later than planned and their effects will - at least partly - fall behind expectations. Other legal instruments such as minimum energy performance standards for domestic appliances etc. were - in spite of the programme - not implemented yet.
On the other hand, substantial financial incentives were introduced. Especially schemes granting low-interest loans for building renovation were introduced. However tax subsidies for low-energy buildings were phased out.
In general we can conclude from our case study that Germany was not able to compensate for the slower or restricted implementation of legal instruments through the introduction of financial incentives. Particularly the efficient use of electricity has been left aside as almost no further policy action was taken since 2001.
Thus energy efficiency in the residential sector will not deliver the GHG reductions planned for in the German climate change programme until 2005. From our findings we draw conclusions and recommendations towards policy makers: Which lessons are to be learnt and what has to be done in order to fully harness EE potentials in residential sector as planned for 2010?