Some Thoughts on the Doha Climate Talks
By experts and staff
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- Michael LeviDavid M. Rubenstein Senior Fellow for Energy and the Environment and Director of the Maurice R. Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies
The annual United Nations climate talks got underway in Doha, Qatar on Monday.
In a piece for the CFR website, I walk through the issues on the table, and offer some thoughts on U.S. strategy. The title of the piece – “A Transitional Climate Summit in Doha” – is a pretty good summary. After three years of high tension and high stakes summits, Doha will almost certainly be more mellow, though no climate conference would be complete without a few fireworks toward the end. Read the whole piece for more.
In an op-ed in the Financial Times, I observe that Qarar is an unusual place to host a climate summit, but a great setting to debate an increasingly prominent part of the climate conversation: what role should natural gas play in global climate strategy? The strangely fitting setting for the talks dawned on me when I visited the tiny Gulf state a couple weeks ago. I argue in the piece that natural gas has an important role to play, but that strategists should not lose sight of the medium and longer terms, where a strong shift to zero-carbon energy will become essential. I also say a bit about policy (though I appreciate that connecting the policy decisions I discuss to the UN talks is a stretch). Read the whole thing for more, at the FT website or on CFR.org.
Now is also probably as good a time as any to link back to a post I wrote a year ago that tells the story of what I often think is the biggest Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) boondoggle ever. If you guessed that it’s in Qatar, you’re right.