Call for abstracts for a fully funded workshop:

The Global Turn to Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading: 
Experiments, Innovation, Actors, Drivers and Consequences

8-9 February 2016, Leuven

 

EXTENDED DEADLINE: 30 NOVEMEBR 2015

 Emissions Trading & Experimentation
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions trading has gained prominence since the early 
2000s. The overarching topic for this workshop is the emergence of carbon 
markets in different jurisdictions and their existing and potential linkages. 
The driving factors for adopting emissions trading systems, their different 
designs, the main actors involved and the main effects and consequences will be 
part of the workshop discussion. Establishing a market is always accompanied by 
uncertainty. Its functioning cannot be predicted with entire certainty. For 
this reason, they can be considered experiments that produce information about 
successes and failures and that may need to be adjusted in cases of 
unanticipated events. The workshop will discuss to what extent the experiment 
concept is a suitable overarching framework for research in this issue area.

This fully funded workshop will bring together about 30 scholars and 
practitioners under the flag of the COST Action INOGOV (Innovations in Climate 
Governance) to discuss carbon markets, their drivers, innovation and 
experimentation. It aims to foster better and more integrated analytical 
discussions about carbon markets and how they play into the broader debate on 
climate policy and governance innovation. We invite social scientists from all 
disciplines and welcome theoretical papers and empirical studies. The aim of 
the workshop is to produce a set of manuscripts that form a special issue or an 
edited book.

Topical themes
We invite contributions that analyse how and why different jurisdictions 
adopted GHG emissions trading systems. This includes the identification of 
factors that can explain innovative adjustment of ETS to domestic preferences 
and contexts and the evolution of ETS over time. Papers addressing the various 
formal and informal connections between different ETS and the role of public 
and private actors are very welcome. We aim to bring together different 
in-depth case studies to identify global patterns of diffusion, 
cross-fertilisation and idiosyncratism. The workshop aim at looking at the 
bigger picture of an emergent, though fragmented, global web of carbon markets. 
It strives to investigate in greater detail the different forms of 
experimentation, innovation and coordination between the different existing and 
emergent ETS.

Papers that address the following and related questions are welcome:
-       Who adopts an ETS and who doesn’t? Can we identify adoption and 
non-adoption patterns?
-       How can we conceptualise the (potential) connections between the 
different ETS?
-       What role does diffusion play? What global patterns of diffusion, 
cross-fertilisation and ideosyncratism can we identify?
-       To what extent and how does the design of systems differ?
-       What is the relationship between design and effectiveness (in 
contributing to emissions cuts)?
-       What domestic and international factors can explain innovation, 
experimentation and adjustment of emissions trading?
-       What role do actors, in particular policy entrepreneurs, play in ETS 
innovation and experimentation?
-       What is the role of organisations such as the World Bank, UNDP, UNFCCC 
and ICAP?
-       What role do networks play?
-       To what extent and how well do multilateral and bilateral organisations 
and actors coordinated in this issue area, for instance in the case of China?
-       Can the EU ETS be considered a hub and reference point for the 
development of ETS’ in other jurisdictions?
-       To what extent and how is the promotion of emissions trading integrated 
in the bilateral aid programmes and diplomacy of states such as Germany, the 
UK, and the US?
The workshop aims at condensing and integrating findings so as to generate a 
synthesis that can contribute to both academic research and policy-making.

Practicalities and submission deadlines
The workshop will be funded under the 4 year COST Action INOGOV (IS1309 
Innovations in Climate Governance: Sources, Patterns and Effects) (2014-8). 
INOGOV will cover reasonable travel costs and accommodation of all invited 
authors, subject to standard COST reimbursement and eligibility rules.

Prof Michael Grubb, University College London has confirmed his participation 
as keynote speaker.

Interested participants/authors are invited to submit a 500-word abstract by 30 
November 2015 as a first step towards full paper development. Please send your 
abstract to Katja Biedenkopf: [email protected].

Authors will be notified of acceptance/rejection by 14 December 2015. 
Contributing authors are expected to submit their paper by 25 January 2016 (at 
the latest) to be distributed to all participants before the workshop. The 
drafts will intensively be debated at the workshop, which will take place on 
8-9 February 2016.

Authors with specific questions are encouraged to contact either Katja 
Biedenkopf ([email protected]), Patrick Müller 
([email protected]), Peter Slominski ([email protected]) 
or Jørgen Wettestad ([email protected]).

Local organizers: Katja Biedenkopf ([email protected]) & Sarah 
Van Eynde ([email protected]), University of Leuven

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