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040 _aOLADE-CDD
_cOLADE-CDD
041 _aeng
082 _a332.67
_bE2611
100 _aEdwards, Guy
245 _aA high - carbon partnership?
_bChinese - Latin American relations in a carbon-constrained world
260 _aWashington:
_bThe Brooking Institution,
_c2014
300 _a30 p.
490 _aGlobal Economy and Development. Working Paper
_v72
500 _aPublicación digital
504 _a08800
505 _aChina's rapidly increasing investment, trade and loans in Latin America may be entrenching high-carbon development pathways in the region, a trend scarcely mentioned in policy circles. High-carbon activities include the extraction of fossil fuels and other natural resources, expansion of large-scale agriculture and the energy-intensive stages of processing natural resources into intermediate goods. This paper addresses three examples, including Chinese investments in Venezuela's oil sector and a Costa Rican oil refinery, and Chinese investment in and purchases of Brazilian soybeans. We pose the question of whether there is a tie between China's role in opening up vast resources in Latin America and the way those nations make national climate policy and how they behave at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations. We focus on the period between the 2009 Copenhagen round of negotiations and the run-up to the Paris negotiations scheduled for 2015, when the UNFCCC will attempt to finalize a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol.
650 _aInversiones
650 _aIndustria del Petróleo
650 _aDióxido de Carbono
650 _aCambio Climático
651 _aAmérica Latina
651 _aChina
700 _aRoberts, J. Timmons
856 _uhttp://biblioteca.olade.org/opac-tmpl/Documentos/cg00133.pdf
942 _2ddc
_cDOCD