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Global institutions and debates about climate change governance attract considerable academic and media attention. The main multilateral forums are arenas for high-profile political negotiations, inter-state conflicts, and thousands of nongovernmental actors. Similarly, national climate change politics and policy are significant to decision makers and scholars, and local and urban climate change activism and planning also draw notable interest. However, outside the European Union (EU), much less analytical and political attention is paid to issues and possibilities of regional-level climate change governance—despite the fact that regional cooperation and institutional arrangements offer a multitude of political, economic, and environmental benefits not readily available in local, national, or global settings (Balsiger Jordan, Huitema, Van Asselt, Rayner, Patt, 2009). Furthermore, regional policy making around economic integration and trade has proliferated in recent decades, resulting in scholarly and political debates about the complementarities and conflicts between global and regional trade initiatives, state sovereignty, and democratic governance (Kuhnhardt, 2010; Laursen, 2003). Even as North American trade and economic integration deepened significantly over the last 20 years, little public debate about regional options for better climate change and energy governance has followed. In fact, few leading North American national politicians—some in Canada and Mexico but practically none in the United States—have paid serious attention to continental alternatives for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and addressing adaptation needs, even as the dynamic nature of multilevel climate change governance driven by subnational policy leadership across the continent is growing (Selin Selin Stoett, 2009). Early stages of North American climate change politics can be characterized as “bottom-up expansion” (Selin Selin Selin & VanDeveer, 2007, 2009a). For example, under The Climate Registry, over 60 member states, provinces, and tribes from all three North American countries collaborate, serving as a basis for continental standardization of GHG estimation and reporting. Through the Western Climate Initiative (WCI), a set of U. S. and Mexican states and Canadian provinces cooperate to address climate change and implement a joint strategy to reduce GHG emissions. Six U. S. states and five Canadian Provinces formulated a joint action plan under the Conference of New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers, and are developing intra-jurisdictional policies and programs toward meeting shared policy goals and GHG reduction targets. The same New England states and four others launched the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a GHG cap-and-trade scheme, in late 2008, following a period of collaboration and rule making dating back to 2003. By late 2010, officials from RGGI states were sharing expertise and information and working with officials and activists in WCI states and provinces (among others), seeking ways to collaborate on rules, standards, and programs across jurisdictions and with federal authorities. State- and provincial-level renewable portfolio standards currently contain a plethora of differing mandates and definitions (Carley, 2011). Some of these experiments in renewable energy generation and carbon governance are more effective, easier to implement, and/or more efficient than others. State and provincial officials are also engaged in policy diffusion and lesson learning, seeking to improve individual and collective standards and mandates. There are also practical reasons for lesson drawing and harmonization across subnational jurisdictions, as regulatory diversity and contradictions in basic definitions of what constitutes “renewable” energy or an “energy efficient” product may obstruct or distort trade (Rowlands, 2009). States and provinces currently have very different levels of renewable energy in their grids and substantially different legal and regulatory institutions related to environmental protection and energy production and consumption. Greater continental cooperation for climate change and energy policies offers enumerable learning opportunities from these diverse contexts and policy experiments, while reaping benefits of at least some policy harmonization. Alongside the many institutionalized cross-border forums for North American policy diffusion and lesson learning, a growing number of policy leaders use organizations and professional and personal networks to move information about climate change policies and management actions across public, private, and civil society sectors. Many policy advocates in public, private, and civil society sectors rely on such connections for information and advice. This may lead to changes in professional norms and interests, as meetings and training programs in professions such as transport and land-use planning, wastewater treatment, and public accounting incorporate climate change mitigation and adaptation into their normal activities. Of course, various levels of governance authority may encounter limits in their ability to lead and influence others—a point demonstrated by Gore's (2010) analysis of Canadian municipal networks. North America is a long way from standardized governance, but policy diffusion and learning may build increased normative agreement around the need to reduce GHG emissions over time and adapt to a changing environment (Selin & VanDeveer, 2007). The 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) created a single trilateral marketplace. It is one of the world's largest regional trading blocs and has governed continental trade for almost 20 years. By 2008, all NAFTA duties and quantitative restrictions had been eliminated. NAFTA covers electricity, as well as the trade in tens of thousands of goods and services which create and use energy. The NAFTA market includes more than 440 million people producing 17 trillion in goods and services every year. These economic activities also generate over 8. 3 billion tons of GHG emissions, constituting over 20 percent of global emissions. Yet, there remains markedly little trilateral cooperation and debate among Canada, the United States, and Mexico around important climate change issues. Recognizing the importance of NAFTA when planning and implementing GHG policies, continental climate change cooperation affords opportunities to increase economic efficiencies and reduce the costs of green technology expansion, clean energy development, and the introduction of liquid carbon markets in all three countries. With respect to the introduction of green technologies, economies of scale dynamics dictate that average cost per unit falls as the size of the market and competition increase. The development of shared standards for less carbon intensive goods commonly traded under NAFTA would facilitate growth in continental markets for more energy and fuel-efficient products such as automobiles and other vehicles, home appliances, office equipment, and heating and air conditioning units. Raising such standards may have the benefit of using the size of the NAFTA market to push North American manufacturers to develop new products that can be sold also in foreign markets, as well as drive foreign firms to make more efficient products for the NAFTA market. As European standard setters know, there is global power in high standards because the costs for foreign producers to are generally much than a large market like the EU or NAFTA (Selin & VanDeveer, minimum standards also a to the A North American standard that a cannot to from one NAFTA jurisdiction to to with GHG Because of energy markets and shared and economic provinces and states around the Canadian and U. S. and states on both of the U. S. and Mexican common energy Greater harmonization of standards would facilitate renewable energy trade both This would opportunities for like Mexican of and power to the United States and Canadian of to the United energy production and grids many of and transnational such development may not the to transport renewable energy from it can be to it is most As it state and provincial renewable portfolio standards contain a plethora of differing mandates and definitions which can obstruct cross-border legal (Rowlands, 2009). from and also air and of more et al. , 2009). North American carbon markets are currently in their However, North 8. 3 billion tons of carbon emissions suggest that with serious GHG the of a continental carbon market to billion a of emissions are carbon markets it that bottom-up and multilevel dynamics be at Regional and state markets in the United States and the United States and Canadian are operating or in development. There are benefits of these systems to common Rather than national and/or more subnational carbon markets, a continental market would efficiency opportunities and a market take of institutions for continental economic In the there are opportunities for greater cooperation among jurisdictions to take the lead in developing carbon As energy across often by traded with from multiple it makes economic and political to carbon markets to drive and North American GHG emissions. GHG mitigation is one of the climate change a one The public authorities and other stakeholders in the United States, Canada, and Mexico begin addressing regional adaptation issues the better can for challenges with and possible Expanded climate governance can North American societies to for shared and cross-border adaptation such as those related to and and and management makers and in all three countries have to regional and local and design and subnational policy makers use common forums to the diffusion and of adaptation policies at state, provincial, and municipal and to that these are coordinated across as Climate change adaptation is a & 2009). Many of people across North America may be by climate change, including and in both urban and areas. Furthermore, climate change may be as an that also more national 2010). A growing number of North American and analysts that of and the of and new opportunities for challenges for states. It is also that there be competition North American as well as other countries for to resources in the even around these issues at Climate These and other of national adaptation issues more regional attention. Greater North American climate change cooperation and can the societies political and economic challenges posed by the and other countries. the United States is for global climate change while Canada is for to implement in global and Mexico remains in a mostly the United to North American mitigation and adaptation learning potential and efficiency increased opportunities to more regional and global climate change and energy policy & 2010). Of course, climate change cooperation within North America and between North America and the of the not be and subnational and stakeholders substantially in their about the most appropriate ways to address climate change at However, expanded multilevel continental governance can important in all three North American countries. than political in global and national this would that North American countries can and their GHG emissions. There may also be opportunities to use cooperation between Canada, the United States, and Mexico as a to better engage other countries in the and on European lessons of regional cooperation and benefits of and standards in forums and global markets, greater North American climate change collaboration as a for the of countries engaged in GHG and adaptation NAFTA states can on common institutions and standards for a carbon American and other states engaged in trade with the NAFTA region might be to into this market the NAFTA agreement as a basis for trade with the United States and others in the Western NAFTA states to implement a common set of energy efficiency standards for these drive some change in product in a of countries in America, Europe, and all to the NAFTA market. Thus, greater North American collaboration offers opportunities for global economic and political influence and leadership. In all three North American states, federal policies to well of those to substantially reduce GHG emissions or to adapt to a changing In fact, Canadian, U. S. , and Mexican national GHG emissions to increase. However, a growing number of climate change and renewable energy leaders on the continent and many subnational actors are and policy In of these policies they are new and institutions and transnational networks their federal Yet, important remain the future development and of more North American climate change policy at all levels of For example, long can subnational leaders to policy and standards a more all subnational jurisdictions and federal federal authorities to subnational leadership and related of standards, or they Many more and for based on empirical research and analysis. This viewpoint article the of North American multilevel governance in the area of climate change mitigation and It some possible benefits of expanded continental collaboration and or on these issues. further of general and and of regional action is from the EU climate change, energy and environmental issues and about multilevel governance more to be in such even much EU climate change policy making has more over while North remains more Nevertheless, European politics and policy that the regional level can a in addressing issues of shared and importance such as climate change. In the European regional can also refer to the EU as a as well as to smaller geographic spaces such as and other of national jurisdictions. The EU makes policies for all member states, but it also cooperation for example, the and the (Balsiger & VanDeveer, 2010). In North America, climate change cooperation has the potential to build on such as the and economic, social, and ecological benefits in the Regional cooperation might include greater use of such as on 2010). options the use of shared institutions such as the WCI to carbon trading among states and provinces, or the for greater common standards and for emissions reporting. Much public policy and public research focuses on states, subnational levels of and/or the of levels of The challenges posed by climate change policy mitigation and for more attention to regional multilevel governance in research design and Climate change demonstrates all well that there is much to and much to
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Henrik Selin
Stacy D. VanDeveer
Review of Policy Research
University of New Hampshire at Manchester
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Selin et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fc264580434838dcdd9068 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-1338.2011.00496.x