Dear GEP-ED colleagues,

 

I would like to share with you a new article (available in open access in 
Climate Policy) on state compliance with multilateral climate transparency 
requirements: 

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14693062.2021.1895705

 

This article relies on a new database (that we have constructed) that may be of 
interest for future research to help explain observed patterns of compliance.

 

Assessing state compliance with multilateral climate transparency requirements: 
‘Transparency Adherence Indices’ and their research and policy implications

Romain Weikmans & Aarti Gupta

 

Abstract: Transparency is increasingly central to multilateral climate 
governance. In this article, we undertake one of the first systematic 
assessments of the nature and extent of compliance with transparency 
requirements under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 
(UNFCCC). Extensive resources are now being devoted to setting up national and 
international transparency systems that aim to render visible what individual 
countries are doing with regard to climate change. It is widely assumed that 
such transparency is vital to securing accountability, trust and thereby also 
enhanced climate actions from all. Yet, whether transparency lives up to this 
transformative promise remains largely unexamined. We generate a first 
systematic overview here of the nature and extent of country engagement with 
and adherence to UNFCCC transparency requirements. Drawing on extensive primary 
documents, including national reports and technical expert assessments of these 
reports, we generate ‘Transparency Adherence Indices’ for developed and 
developing country Parties to the UNFCCC. Our results reveal wide variations in 
adherence to mandatory reporting requirements and no clear general pattern of 
improvement since 2014. Our Indices help to illustrate trends and highlight 
knowledge gaps around the observed adherence patterns. This is timely since the 
2015 Paris Agreement calls for an ‘enhanced transparency framework’ to be 
implemented by 2024 that builds on existing UNFCCC transparency systems. We 
conclude with identifying a research and policy agenda to help explain observed 
patterns of adherence, and emphasize the need for continued scrutiny of assumed 
links between transparency and climate action.

 

Best regards,

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
Part-Time Lecturer at the Université Libre de Bruxelles and at Sciences Po Paris

Vice-Chair of the Working Group "Energy-Climate" of the Belgian Federal Council 
for Sustainable Development

 

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
Postal Address: Avenue Franklin Roosevelt 50 CP130/03, 1050 Brussels, Belgium
Office: Avenue Antoine Depage 30, 1050 Brussels, Building D, 6th Floor, 
DB.6.248 (By Appointment Only) 

Email: [email protected] 

Webpage: http://igeat.ulb.ac.be/en/equipe/details/person/romain-weikmans/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RomainWeikmans

ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Romain_Weikmans

 

 

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