Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ipea.gov.br/handle/11058/3247
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dc.contributor.authorMotta, Ronaldo Seroa da (Editor)-
dc.contributor.authorHargrave, Jorge (Editor)-
dc.contributor.authorLuedemann, Gustavo (Editor)-
dc.contributor.authorSarmiento Gutierrez, Maria Bernadete Gomes Pereira (Editor)-
dc.coverage.spatialBrasilpt_BR
dc.coverage.spatialRegião Metropolitana de São Paulopt_BR
dc.date.accessioned2014-11-25T17:00:30Z-
dc.date.available2014-11-25T17:00:30Z-
dc.date.issued2011-
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorio.ipea.gov.br/handle/11058/3247-
dc.description.abstractDiscute alguns dos aspectos regulatórios nacionais e internacionais da mudança climática. Os textos variam entre avaliações econômicas, institucionais, setoriais e sociais.pt_BR
dc.language.isoen-USpt_BR
dc.publisherInstituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea)pt_BR
dc.titleClimate change in Brazil: economic, social and regulatory aspectspt_BR
dc.title.alternativeMudança do clima no Brasil: aspectos econômicos, sociais e regulatóriospt_BR
dc.typeLivrospt_BR
dc.rights.holderInstituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea)pt_BR
dc.source.urlsourcehttp://www.ipea.gov.brpt_BR
dc.location.countryBRpt_BR
dc.description.physical360 p. : il.pt_BR
dc.rights.licenseReproduction of this text and the data it contains is allowed as long as the source is cited. Reproductions for commercial purposes are prohibited.pt_BR
dc.subject.keywordMudança climáticapt_BR
dc.subject.keywordAspectos regulatórios da mudança climáticapt_BR
dc.subject.keywordProtocolo de Montrealpt_BR
dc.subject.keywordProtocolo de Kyotopt_BR
ipea.description.additionalinformationConteúdo: Parte I: Climate change in Brazil – Cap. 1. The national policy on climate change: regulatory and governance aspects / Ronaldo Seroa da Motta; Cap. 2. Climate change regulation in Brazil and the role of subnational governments/ Viviane Romeiro, Virginia Parente; Cap. 3. Complementarity between greenhouse gas mitigation policies and urban life quality policies/ Carolina Burle Schmidt Dubeux; Cap. 4. Brazilian inventory of anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases not controlled by the Montreal protocol/ Ana Carolina Avzaradel; Cap. 5. Breaking the trade-off between poverty alleviation and GHG mitigation: the case of household energy consumption in Brazil/ Thiago Fonseca Morello, Vitor Schmid, Ricardo Abramovay; Cap. 6. Agriculture and cattle raising in the context of a low carbon economy/ Gustavo Barbosa Mozzer; Cap 7. Road transport and climate change in Brazil/ Patrícia Helena Gambogi Boson; Cap. 8. From CDM to nationally appropriate mitigation actions: financing prospects for the Brazilian sustainable development / Maria Bernadete Sarmiento Gutierrez; Cap. 9. Development, cooperation and transfer of low carbon energy technologies/ Gilberto de Martino Jannuzzi , Marcelo Khaled Poppe; Cap. 10. Trade barriers and climate policies/ Ronaldo Seroa da Motta; Cap. 11. Vulnerability of Brazilian megacities to climate change: the São Paulo metropolitan region (rmsp)/ Carlos Afonso Nobre, Andrea Ferraz Young, Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva, José Antônio Marengo Orsini, Antonio Donato Nobre, Agostinho Tadashi Ogura, Osório Thomaz, Guillermo Oswaldo Obregón Párraga, Gustavo Costa Moreira da Silva, Maria Valverde, André Carvalho Silveira, Grasiela de Oliveira Rodrigues; Cap. 12. The climate justice discourse in Brazil: potential and perspectives/ Bruno Milanez, Igor Ferraz da Fonseca; Cap. 13. Climate change and vulnerability to drought in the semiarid: the case of smallholder farmers in the Brazilian Northeast/ Diego Pereira Lindoso, Juliana Dalboni Rocha, Nathan Debortoli, Izabel Cavalcanti Ibiapina Parente, Flávio Eiró, Marcel Bursztyn, Saulo Rodrigues Filho – Parte II - Brazil and the international climate change regime – Cap. 14. Cost-benefit analyses of climate change/ Jorge Hargrave, Ronaldo Seroa da Motta, Gustavo Luedemann; Cap. 15. The targets of the Copenhagen Accord and the Cancun Agreements/ Ronaldo Seroa da Motta, Jorge Hargrave, Gustavo Luedemann; Cap. 16. Climate change negotiations from an industry perspective/ Paula Bennati; Cap. 17. The Kyoto Protocol and the current negotiations of the international regime on climate change/ José Domingos Gonzalez Miguez; Cap. 18. Redd and the challenge of protecting the global forest cover/ Thaís Linhares-Juvenal; Cap. 19. Transfer of technology under the climate change regime/ Haroldo Machado-Filho, Marcelo Khaled Poppept_BR
ipea.description.additionalinformationReferências Bibliográficas: possui referências bibliográficaspt_BR
ipea.description.additionalinformationISBN: 978-85-7811-128-1pt_BR
ipea.access.typeAcesso Abertopt_BR
ipea.rights.typeLicença Comumpt_BR
ipea.englishdescription.abstractThis book gives continuity to the commitment of the Institute of Applied Economic Research (Ipea) in developing studies and research in the area of climate change, which already rests on a long tradition of reflecting on topics such as: costs and benefits of mitigation and adaptation actions, environmental planning in urban and social environments, international politics, development of instruments for technological advancement and regulation of market instruments, as well as in contributing to the Brazilian delegation on the Climate Convention negotiations. This book is a joint effort of the Department of Sectorial Policies and Studies in Innovation, Regulation and Infrastructure (Diset) and the Department of Regional, Urban and Environmental Policies and Studies (Dirur). Above all, this publication testifies to the importance of the climate change topic in for the process of formulating public policies and actions. The principal objective is to offer readers a Brazilian publication about policies that address global warming, through analytical texts produced by 40 specialists, many of which participated as Brazilian negotiators at the Conferences of the Parties of the Climate Convention and are members of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). They represent 18 Brazilian institutions among which universities, research centers and ministries of the federal government. The intention of this book is not to exhaust all topics nor to present academic texts. But rather to offer chapters with analytical rigor that discuss some aspects of the Brazilian and international regulatory frameworks from various perspectives. Thus, this book reaffirms the role of Ipea in the debate on climate change and related public policies, in the national and international arenas. This is yet another demonstration that Ipea is even more devoted to the Brazilian government’s efforts of formulating public policies through its ability to coordinate research efforts and its disciplinary and institutional diversity.pt_BR
ipea.researchfieldsN/Apt_BR
ipea.classificationMeio Ambiente. Recursos Naturaispt_BR
Appears in Collections:Meio Ambiente. Recursos Naturais: Livros

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