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7 issues about climate change that citizens and the media need to know to evaluate any nation's response

 Seven Features of Climate Change That Citizens and the Media Need to Understand To Critically Evaluate a Government’s Response to This Existential Threat and the Arguments of Opponents of Climate Policies.   



The seven issues discussed in this article are:

1. Because of certain features of climate change, many policy-making issues raise ethical/fairness questions that are practically significant for global prospects of preventing catastrophic climate harms.

2. Issues that arise in four steps that the setting of a national GHG emissions reduction target Implicitly takes a position on.

3. Because all CO2e emissions are diminishing the carbon budget that must constrain world emissions to achieve any warming limit goal, the speed of reducing GHG emissions as well as the magnitude of emissions reductions are crucial for achieving any warming limit goal.

4. Although the consensus scientific position on climate change is extraordinarily strong, no nation may fail to comply with its obligations under the 1992 UNFCCC on the basis of scientific uncertainty because all nations expressly agreed under the 1992 treaty to be bound by the precautionary principle.

5No developed nation may fail to comply with Its obligations to reduce Its GHG emissions to Its fair share of safe global emissions under the UNFCCC on the basis of cost to the nation.

6. Cost-benefit analysis is not an ethically acceptable tool for limiting a government’s climate change responsibilities.

7. Developed nations under the 1992 UNFCCC acknowledged a duty to assist developing nations with financing their adaptation and mitigation costs and have a moral/legal responsibility to help compensate developing nations for their climate change caused losses and damages.

See" https://ethicsandclimate.org/2020/08/19/why-getting-nations-to-comply-with-ethical/https://ethicsandclimate.org/2020/08/19/why-getting-nations-to-comply-with-ethical/


Donald A. Brown

Scholar In Residence 
Sustainability Ethics and Law
Widener University Commonwealth Law School
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Winner of 2019  UNESCO Avicenna Prize for Climate Change Ethics
Contributing Author, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 5th Assessment
http://ssrn.com/author=1331896 (papers published on SSRN )
717-802-1009 (cell)

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