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Home >  Events >  Return to Rio
Return to Rio
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Reexamining Climate Change Science, Economics, and Policy
Start:  Wednesday, November 19, 2003  10:00 AM
End:  Wednesday, November 19, 2003  4:30 PM
Location:  Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI
1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
Directions to AEI

The 1992 Rio Earth Summit produced an important, common sense consensus in favor of avoiding "dangerous interference" with the global climate. Rio, however, led to the Kyoto Protocol, which abandoned the focus on reliable science and effective policy in favor of arbitrary, unrealistic targets and timetables. Kyoto, for all practical purposes, is now dead: the United States and Russia will not participate in the agreement, the European Union is not meeting its commitments to the protocol, and the developing world was never included. Six years after Kyoto, a new approach is needed.

This AEI conference seeks to restart the climate-change dialogue by returning to the spirit and purpose of the Rio consensus in the weeks leading up to the opening of the 9th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Milan, Italy, on December 1, 2003. Panelists will discuss the science of climate change, which has grown more uncertain and more susceptible to political influence in recent years, and public policy issues such as how to spend research money and spur innovation. A return to Rio will offer the opportunity to reexamine how dangerous warming is likely to be, what steps should be taken to address it, and what can be done to reestablish the common sense consensus that led to the Framework Convention.

9:45 a.m.

Registration

10:00 Welcome: Christopher DeMuth, AEI
10:15 Panel I: The State of the Science

 

Presenters:

Sallie Baliunas, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

 

 

David Legates, University of Delaware

 

 

Mark Jacobson, Stanford University

 

 

Art Green, Exxon Mobil

 

Moderator:

James K. Glassman, AEI
Noon Luncheon

 

 

Keynote Speech: Paula Dobriansky, under secretary of state for global affairs
1:30 p.m. Panel II: A European Perspective on Climate Change
  Presenter: Gerd-Rainer Weber, German Coal Mining Association
  Discussant: Roger Bate, AEI

2:00

Panel III: Public Policy
  Presenters: Thomas Schelling, Harvard University and the University of Maryland
    Robert Shackleton, Congressional Budget Office
    Margo Thorning, American Council for Capital Formation
    William Pizer, Resources for the Future
  Moderator: Samuel Thernstrom, AEI
3:30 Interdisciplinary Roundtable

 

All participants are encouraged to stay for open discussion if schedules permit.

4:30

Adjournment


More Information
Ryan Stowers
American Enterprise Institute
 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W.
Washington, DC  20036
Phone: 202-862-5806
Fax: 202-862-7177
E-mail: RStowers@aei.org

Media Inquiries
Veronique Rodman
American Enterprise Institute
 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W.
Washington, DC  20036
Phone: 202-862-4870
E-mail: VRodman@aei.org
AEI Print Index No. 16066


Event Materials
  Summary
  Video
Related Material
Speaker Biographies
Baliunas's presentation  
Dobriansky's remarks
Green's presentation  
Jacobson's presentation  
Legates's presentation  
Thorning's presentation  
Weber's presentation  
Conference Summary  
DeMuth's introduction
Related Links
Environmental Policy Outlook
Polls on the Environment