Bibliography - C.-J. Yang
- Yang, C.-J., and Michael Oppenheimer, 2007: A “Manhattan Project” for Climate Change? Climatic Change, 80(3-4), doi:10.1007/S10584-006-9202-7 199-204
[ Abstract ]Climate change is a chronic yet unprecedented threat to civilization. Large scale abatement
of greenhouse-gas emissions would require not only replacing carbon-intensive fuels (like
coal and oil) with low-emission or carbon-free energy alternatives, but also replacing much
of the infrastructure that uses primary and secondary energy. As a political issue, the scale
of the problem makes carbon mitigation unique and difficult to resolve. Its chronic nature is
another obstacle to implementation of policy in the near term. It would take decades to
displace fossil fuels even if the technologies to do so were available. Furthermore,
disagreement has arisen on whether currently available technologies are sufficient to
significantly reduce emissions over the next several decades (Pacala and Socolow 2004;
Hoffert et al. 2002). The notion of developing new technologies before mandating
emissions reductions has gained currency in response to these complexities. The Bush
Administration climate policy favors this line of thinking, rejecting any Kyoto-style
arrangement involving mandatory targets and proposing the development of new
technologies as an alternative (Bush 2005). Here we argue that such approaches are based
on the misconception that innovations needed for carbon mitigation can be effectively and
efficiently developed without carbon regulations.
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