Difference between revisions of "Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition"
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|Website address=http://www.carbonpricingleadership.org/ | |Website address=http://www.carbonpricingleadership.org/ | ||
|Starting year=2015 | |Starting year=2015 | ||
− | |Secretariat=World Bank | + | |Secretariat=World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund, e-mail: tkerr@ifc.org |
|Organisational structure=Members of the Carbon Pricing Panel include German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, French President François Hollande, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, Philippines President Benigno Aquino III, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Governor Jerry Brown of California, and Mayor Eduardo Paes of Rio de Janeiro. | |Organisational structure=Members of the Carbon Pricing Panel include German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, French President François Hollande, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, Philippines President Benigno Aquino III, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Governor Jerry Brown of California, and Mayor Eduardo Paes of Rio de Janeiro. | ||
The panel provides political momentum to complement the voices of government and industry leaders in the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition – an action based platform set up on the back of support for carbon pricing from 74 countries and 1,000 companies at the United Nations Climate Summit in September 2014. | The panel provides political momentum to complement the voices of government and industry leaders in the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition – an action based platform set up on the back of support for carbon pricing from 74 countries and 1,000 companies at the United Nations Climate Summit in September 2014. | ||
Private sector support comes from US Institutional Investor Calpers, Engie of France, Mahindra Group of India, and Netherlands based Royal DSM who, with other leading businesses, work to link business needs with public policies through the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition. | Private sector support comes from US Institutional Investor Calpers, Engie of France, Mahindra Group of India, and Netherlands based Royal DSM who, with other leading businesses, work to link business needs with public policies through the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition. | ||
− | The Secretariat of the CPLC is the World Bank Group. The CPLC has a 9 member steering committee composed of government, business and strategic partners, and sets of co-chairs for each of the Coalition’s three working groups. The Coalition’s annual High-Level Assembly is co-chaired for 2016 by Segolene Royal, French Minister of Ecology, and Feike Sijbesma, CEO of Royal DSM. | + | The Secretariat of the CPLC is the World Bank Group. The CPLC has a 9 member steering committee composed of government, business and strategic partners, and sets of co-chairs for each of the Coalition’s three working groups. The Coalition’s annual High-Level Assembly is co-chaired for 2016 by Segolene Royal, French Minister of Ecology, and Feike Sijbesma, CEO of Royal DSM. |
− | + | ||
|Geographical coverage=Global | |Geographical coverage=Global | ||
|Type of initiative=Political dialogue | |Type of initiative=Political dialogue | ||
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|Governmental bodies/agencies=24 | |Governmental bodies/agencies=24 | ||
|Other organisations=25 | |Other organisations=25 | ||
+ | |Have only national states as participators=No | ||
|Short and long-time objectives=Short term objectives: | |Short and long-time objectives=Short term objectives: | ||
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The Coalition aims to support the vision statement of World Bank and IMF-convened Carbon Pricing Panel, composed of the leaders of Germany, Mexico, Canada, Chile, Ethiopia, France, California and Rio de Janeiro. | The Coalition aims to support the vision statement of World Bank and IMF-convened Carbon Pricing Panel, composed of the leaders of Germany, Mexico, Canada, Chile, Ethiopia, France, California and Rio de Janeiro. | ||
The vision statement calls on the world to expand carbon pricing to cover 25 percent of global emissions by 2020 – double the current level – and to achieve 50 percent coverage within the next decade. It outlines three ways to achieve this vision: by increasing the number of governments putting a price on carbon, deepening existing carbon pricing programs, and promoting global cooperation. | The vision statement calls on the world to expand carbon pricing to cover 25 percent of global emissions by 2020 – double the current level – and to achieve 50 percent coverage within the next decade. It outlines three ways to achieve this vision: by increasing the number of governments putting a price on carbon, deepening existing carbon pricing programs, and promoting global cooperation. | ||
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|Roadmap and work plan=The CPLC Work Plan is outlined below. | |Roadmap and work plan=The CPLC Work Plan is outlined below. | ||
The Coalition helps leaders from government and business to build the evidence base for successful carbon pricing; to mobilize progressive business support; and to have a constructive dialogue, country by country, about how to put in place successful pricing policies. These interlinked goals, and the actions planned to achieve them, make up the CPLC Work Plan. | The Coalition helps leaders from government and business to build the evidence base for successful carbon pricing; to mobilize progressive business support; and to have a constructive dialogue, country by country, about how to put in place successful pricing policies. These interlinked goals, and the actions planned to achieve them, make up the CPLC Work Plan. | ||
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- Briefing and engaging executives and investors on carbon pricing, potential implications for investors, and business rationales for supporting carbon pricing. | - Briefing and engaging executives and investors on carbon pricing, potential implications for investors, and business rationales for supporting carbon pricing. | ||
− | 3) Convening Leadership Dialogues - The CPLC will provides a platform for government, business and civil society leaders to exchange experience, showcase progress, and catalyze action on carbon pricing. The CPLC works with and complements existing initiatives. It does so by creating a platform with Partners collaboration among businesses and governments on lessons and experience on carbon pricing system design and implementation, hosting global and regional leadership dialogues; and, on request, organizing national government/business dialogues with tailored analysis | + | 3) Convening Leadership Dialogues - The CPLC will provides a platform for government, business and civil society leaders to exchange experience, showcase progress, and catalyze action on carbon pricing. The CPLC works with and complements existing initiatives. It does so by creating a platform with Partners collaboration among businesses and governments on lessons and experience on carbon pricing system design and implementation, hosting global and regional leadership dialogues; and, on request, organizing national government/business dialogues with tailored analysis |
− | + | |Progress that has been made by your initiative=The CPLC held its inaugural High-Level Assembly in April 2016, highlighting and building global momentum on carbon pricing and formalizing the Coalition work plan. The CPLC has also convened leadership dialogue events on carbon pricing in Chile, Columbia, India, France and South Africa since COP21. The Coalition has brought on dozens of new partners since its launch at COP21, including the governments of Finland, UK, Columbia, Cote d’Ivoire and Japan. | |
− | |Progress that has been made by your initiative=The CPLC held its inaugural High-Level Assembly in April 2016, highlighting and building global momentum on carbon pricing and formalizing the Coalition work plan. The CPLC has also convened leadership dialogue events on carbon pricing in Chile, Columbia, India, France and South Africa since COP21. The Coalition has brought on dozens of new partners since its launch at COP21, including the governments of Finland, UK, Columbia, Cote d’Ivoire and Japan. | + | |
|Tracking adaptation progress (quantitative)=Number of organizations joining as CPLC Partners | |Tracking adaptation progress (quantitative)=Number of organizations joining as CPLC Partners | ||
Number and quality of CPLC dialogues conducted | Number and quality of CPLC dialogues conducted | ||
− | Number of website hits/downloads to access CPLC knowledge content | + | Number of website hits/downloads to access CPLC knowledge content |
− | + | ||
|Tracking mitigation progress (quantitative)=The Coalition also tracks completion of work plan items including: | |Tracking mitigation progress (quantitative)=The Coalition also tracks completion of work plan items including: | ||
-Successful sharing of high-level synthesis on key issues in carbon pricing discussions including, for 2016, alignment of carbon pricing with other policies, social and distributional impacts of carbon pricing, uses of carbon pricing revenues, international linking of carbon pricing schemes | -Successful sharing of high-level synthesis on key issues in carbon pricing discussions including, for 2016, alignment of carbon pricing with other policies, social and distributional impacts of carbon pricing, uses of carbon pricing revenues, international linking of carbon pricing schemes | ||
− | -Development of knowledge products and tools to facilitate use of internal carbon pricing, and engage with businesses to use these tools and products, as well as providing executive briefs on key issues. | + | -Development of knowledge products and tools to facilitate use of internal carbon pricing, and engage with businesses to use these tools and products, as well as providing executive briefs on key issues. |
− | + | |Related initiatives= | |
}} | }} |
Revision as of 14:11, 23 February 2017
General
Name of initiative | Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition |
---|---|
LPAA initiative | No |
NAZCA Initiative | No |
Website address | http://www.carbonpricingleadership.org/ |
Related initiatives | |
Starting year | 2015 |
End year | |
Secretariat | World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund, e-mail: tkerr@ifc.org |
Organisational structure | Members of the Carbon Pricing Panel include German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, French President François Hollande, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, Philippines President Benigno Aquino III, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Governor Jerry Brown of California, and Mayor Eduardo Paes of Rio de Janeiro.
The panel provides political momentum to complement the voices of government and industry leaders in the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition – an action based platform set up on the back of support for carbon pricing from 74 countries and 1,000 companies at the United Nations Climate Summit in September 2014. Private sector support comes from US Institutional Investor Calpers, Engie of France, Mahindra Group of India, and Netherlands based Royal DSM who, with other leading businesses, work to link business needs with public policies through the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition. The Secretariat of the CPLC is the World Bank Group. The CPLC has a 9 member steering committee composed of government, business and strategic partners, and sets of co-chairs for each of the Coalition’s three working groups. The Coalition’s annual High-Level Assembly is co-chaired for 2016 by Segolene Royal, French Minister of Ecology, and Feike Sijbesma, CEO of Royal DSM. |
Geographical coverage | Global |
Name of lead organisation | The World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund |
Type of lead organisation | Other intergovernmental organization |
Location/Nationality of lead organisation | United States of America |
Description
Description | Convened by World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim and the International Monetary Fund’s Managing Director Christine Lagarde, the Carbon Pricing Panel is calling on their peers to follow their lead and put a price on carbon. They are joined in this effort by OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria.
74 countries and more than 1,000 companies expressed support for carbon pricing. |
---|---|
Objectives | |
Activities | The Coalition is a voluntary partnership of national and sub-national governments, businesses, and civil society organizations that agree to advance the carbon pricing agenda by working with each other towards the long-term objective of a carbon price applied throughout the global economy by:
Strengthening carbon pricing policies to redirect investment commensurate with the scale of the climate challenge; Bringing forward and strengthening the implementation of existing carbon pricing policies to better manage investment risks and opportunities; and Enhancing cooperation to share information, expertise and lessons learned on developing and implementing carbon pricing through various "readiness" platforms |
One or two success stories achieved |
Monitoring and Impacts
Function of initiative | Political dialogue, Technical dialogue |
---|---|
Activity of initiative | Policy planning and recommendations, Knowledge dissemination and exchange |
Indicators | |
Goals | |
Comments on indicators and goals | |
How will goals be achieved | |
Have you changed or strenghtened your goals | |
Progress towards the goals | The CPLC held its inaugural High-Level Assembly in April 2016, highlighting and building global momentum on carbon pricing and formalizing the Coalition work plan. The CPLC has also convened leadership dialogue events on carbon pricing in Chile, Columbia, India, France and South Africa since COP21. The Coalition has brought on dozens of new partners since its launch at COP21, including the governments of Finland, UK, Columbia, Cote d’Ivoire and Japan. |
How are you tracking progress of your initiative | |
Available reporting |
Participants
Participants | Number | Names | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Members | 0 | |||
Companies | 0 | |||
Business organisations | 0 | |||
Research and educational organisations | 0 | |||
Non-governmental organisations | 0 | |||
National states | 0 | |||
Governmental actors | 0 | |||
Regional / state / county actors | 0 | |||
City / municipal actors | 0 | |||
Intergovernmental organisations | 0 | |||
Financial Institutions | 0 | |||
Faith based organisations | 0 | |||
Other members | 0 | |||
Supporting partners | 0 | |||
Number of members in the years |
| |||
Have only national states as participators | No |
Theme
Transport | Agriculture | Forestry | Business | Financial institutions | Buildings | Industry | Waste | Cities and subnational governments | Short Term Pollutants | International maritime transport | Energy Supply | Fluorinated gases | Energy efficiency | Renewable energy | Supply chain emission reductions | Adaptation | Other | Resilience | Innovation | Energy Access and Efficiency | Private Finance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No |
Not only have national states as participators