Dear Colleagues,

Following Romain and colleagues' excellent contribution, I would like to share 
with you a related open access publication on climate policy monitoring, which 
appeared online today. I believe this is highly complementary and closely links 
with questions on transparency.

Schoenefeld, J.J.; Schulze, K.; Hildén, M.; Jordan, A.J. (2019). Policy 
Monitoring in the EU: The Impact of Institutions, Implementation, and Quality. 
Politische Vierteljahresschrift 60(4). Available at: 
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11615-019-00209-2 
[cid:9ff19825-57d5-4c64-9d04-1de199d62a41] <javascript:>  
[cid:571ffa9f-55ae-43a0-8385-18957810d0c0] 
[cid:5527ca7b-d8f0-4fd8-ac56-5f71558a904a]  (OPEN ACCESS)

Abstract: Policy monitoring is often seen as a crucial ingredient of policy 
evaluation, but theoretically informed empirical analyses of real-world policy 
monitoring practices are still rare. This paper addresses this gap by focusing 
on climate policy monitoring in the European Union, which has a relatively 
stringent system of greenhouse gas monitoring but a much less demanding 
approach to monitoring policies. It explores how institutional settings, policy 
implementation, and the quality of information may impact the practices and 
politics of policy monitoring. Drawing on quantitative regression models and 
qualitative interviews, it demonstrates that policy monitoring has evolved over 
time and is itself subject to implementation pressures, but also exhibits 
learning effects that improve its quality. In further developing both everyday 
policy monitoring practices and academic understanding of them, there is a need 
to pay attention to their design—specifically, the impact of any overarching 
rules, the institutional support for implementation, and the criteria governing 
the quality of the information they deliver. In short, policy monitoring should 
be treated as a governance activity in its own right, raising many different 
design challenges.

Best wishes,
Jonas




Dr. Jonas Schoenefeld
Visiting Researcher
Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research
School of Environmental Sciences
University of East Anglia
Norwich Research Park
Norwich
NR4 7TJ
United Kingdom

New Chapter: 'Monitoring Energy Policy' in the Handbook of Energy Governance 
ein Europe. Available 
here<https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-3-319-73526-9_43-1.pdf>.


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________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Romain 
Weikmans <[email protected]>
Sent: 27 November 2019 18:14
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [gep-ed] New article on the relationship between transparency and 
climate ambition


Dear colleagues,



Many observers think, believe or hope that the Paris Agreement will reveal new 
information on Parties' climate efforts, and that increased transparency will 
stimulate climate ambition.



With Prof. Harro van Asselt and J. Timmons Roberts, we just published a new 
paper in Climate Policy that discusses these issues:





Transparency requirements under the Paris Agreement and their (un)likely impact 
on strengthening the ambition of nationally determined contributions (NDCs)

50 free online copies of this article are available at: 
https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/KSJIBQ6S3NAXTZPZN3JQ/full?target=10.1080/14693062.2019.1695571<https://eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tandfonline.com%2Feprint%2FKSJIBQ6S3NAXTZPZN3JQ%2Ffull%3Ftarget%3D10.1080%2F14693062.2019.1695571&data=02%7C01%7Cp.bocquillon%40uea.ac.uk%7C3f43f08340514c09e81b08d77365b04a%7Cc65f8795ba3d43518a070865e5d8f090%7C0%7C0%7C637104752895525292&sdata=nW39sw8UKGP1ECLEMqmZW8QhOrUYL%2BSZq7zJXW%2FXjWk%3D&reserved=0>



Abstract

How will the Paris Agreement drive countries to address climate change? One 
expectation of the Agreement is that transparency will stimulate countries to 
increase the ambition of their pledges by revealing information on Parties’ 
climate efforts. To this end, the Agreement introduced a new ‘enhanced 
transparency framework’ (ETF) to report and review information on Parties’ 
greenhouse gas emissions, progress made in implementing and achieving 
nationally determined contributions (NDCs), their adaptation actions, and the 
financial, technological and capacity-building support needed, received and 
provided to developing country Parties. However, this relationship between 
transparency and progressive ambition over time remains largely untested. In 
this article, we first outline several pathways through which increased 
transparency could potentially lead to increased ambition. These pathways 
notably depend on the availability of comparable, complete and timely 
information on the performance of Parties. By reviewing the experience with 
past and existing transparency arrangements, we identify four types of 
challenges that will likely pose barriers to the generation of such information 
by the ETF, and suggest some efforts that might address these challenges to 
support greater ambition in future rounds of NDCs.



Key policy insights

• The potential use of the flexibilities offered to developing countries on 
some dimensions of the ETF may lead to the generation of incomplete and 
incomparable information.

• It will be difficult to assess and compare progress made by Parties towards 
achieving their NDCs due to heterogenous, qualitative and conditional NDCs; the 
variety of indicators that Parties will choose to track their progress; and to 
weaknesses in the reporting guidelines on climate action and support.

• Despite ongoing efforts to address this, the information generated by the ETF 
may be outdated and non-comprehensive due to capacity gaps.

• The apolitical design of the ETF means that it will not lead to judgments, 
for example on the level of ambition of an NDC, or even on whether a country is 
achieving its NDC. The ETF is also not equipped to deal with cases of political 
unwillingness to participate in the ETF itself.





Best wishes,

Romain



__

Dr Romain WEIKMANS
Research Fellow of the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (F.R.S.- FNRS) at 
the Centre for Studies on Sustainable Development
Lecturer in the Faculty of Science (ULB) and at Sciences Po Lille

Vice-Chair of the Working Group "Energy-Climate" of the Belgian Federal Council 
for Sustainable Development
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Université Libre de Bruxelles/Free University of Brussels

Department of Geosciences, Environment and Society
Institute for Environmental Management and Land Use Planning
Centre for Studies on Sustainable Development
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