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Why the United States did not become a party to the Kyoto Protocol: German, Norwegian, and US perspectives
115
Citations
28
References
2010
Year
Cooperation TheoryClimate EthicsNegotiationEngineeringNegotiation TheoryClimate PolicyCarbon Neutrality PolicyClimate Change RegulationUnited StatesEnvironmental PolicyPolicy CooperationCarbon Emission TradingUs PerspectivesClimate ActionClimate LawEconomicsPublic PolicyExplanation 2International RelationsClimate NegotiationsEnergy DevelopmentEnergy TransitionEnergy PolicyBusinessExplanation 1Kyoto ProtocolWorld Trade Organization LawClimate GovernancePolitical ScienceInternational Institutions
According to two-level game theory, negotiators tailor agreements at the international level to be ratifiable at the domestic level. This did not happen in the Kyoto negotiations, however, in the US case. We interviewed 26 German, Norwegian, and US participants in and observers of the climate negotiations concerning their views on three explanations for why the United States did not become a party to Kyoto. Explanation 1 argues that Kyoto delegations mistakenly thought the Senate was bluffing when adopting Byrd–Hagel. Explanation 2 contends that Europeans preferred a more ambitious agreement without US participation to a less ambitious agreement with US participation. Finally, explanation 3 suggests that in Kyoto the Clinton–Gore administration gave up on Senate ratification, and essentially pushed for an agreement that would provide them a climate-friendly face. While all explanations received some support from interviewees, explanation 1 and (particularly) explanation 3 received considerably more support than explanation 2.
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