Introducing top-down methods in assessing compliance with the Kyoto Protocol
The Kyoto Protocol has an ambitious reporting and review system to assess Parties' compliance with their emission commitments. It is based on a 'bottom-up' approach; that is, each Party is required to submit detailed inventories of emissions and removals. This requires considerable resources and may still not detect all important cases of non-compliance. We consider the case for introducing 'top-down' methods; that is, independent inverse modelling methods that calculate probable emissions using measured concentrations of gases in the atmosphere and meteorological models. We argue that the top-down methods are at present too inaccurate, too cumbersome, and politically too problematic to serve as independent alternatives to the reported emission inventories for assessing compliance, although they could be useful in monitoring the global success of the protocol. We conclude that these top-down approaches may supplement the traditional emission inventories, in particular those dealing with fluorinated gases, thereby providing input for improving the emission inventory methods.
Year of publication: |
2005
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Authors: | Rypdal, Kristin ; Stordal, Frode ; Fuglestvedt, Jan ; Berntsen, Terje |
Published in: |
Climate Policy. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 1469-3062. - Vol. 5.2005, 4, p. 393-405
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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