01 December 2016 - 07 December 2016
Beijing, People's Republic of China

CD-LINKS project in Beijing: Dialogue with stakeholders on climate and sustainable development

CD-LINKS has engaged in dialogue with Chinese policy makers and an international group of scientists in Beijing, China. The project organized a stakeholder workshop in conjunction with the CD-LINKS project meeting hosted by The Energy Research Institute (ERI) of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) of China, and a session of presentations at the 9th Annual Integrated Assessment Modeling Consortium (IAMC) meeting the first days of December 2017.

On 1 December, the project convened Chinese decision-makers representing the Chinese government and the international community present in China to discuss and receive feedback on some of its initial results on transition pathway development and modelling of sustainable development dimensions. The discussion was highly fruitful and provided to be a great basis for discussing the future plans in the project in the subsequent project meeting.

A key concern raised by the Chinese stakeholders was to have more research data on the sustainable development objectives beyond climate change. For a country like China, economic transition and environmental concerns, such as air pollution, are politically important questions, and therefore research that helps policy makers to understand the underlying synergies and trade-offs between different development concerns was deemed highly useful. Furthermore, as development-related issues tend to be highly complex, more diverse scenarios and model development to better integrate sustainable development issues were called for. The CD-LINKS project aims at strengthening existing Integrated Assessment Modelling (IAM) to better incorporate sustainable development concerns for facilitating the understanding of co-benefits and trade offs of different policy decisions, which is in line with the needs of the Chinese stakeholders.

Finally, the message from the stakeholders was that it is important to keep up a dialogue between decision-makers and science to better confront the challenges for sustainable development that lie ahead.

The second outreach event was held on 7 December 2017 as part of the 9th Annual IAMC meeting, which brings together scientists in the field of IAM from around the world. In this session, project results were presented with a focus on the country-level results, with insights of several of the country teams participating in CD-LINKS (China, Brazil, EU, Japan and India). The discussion centered around how to further develop the scenarios and the models involved in the project. Specifically the goal of CD-LINKS will be to compare the national and global models and incorporate the insights of this comparison to further model development. The inputs from events like these are important in the process of refining the scenarios and models participating in the project.

Engaging with stakeholders early on in the project implementation gives the chance for the project to revise its research agenda to better fit the expectations of stakeholders in different parts of the world, and to provide useful information to countries both in the developing as well as the developed world.


About the CD-LINKS project

CD-LINKS is a research project that brings together a consortium of nineteen leading international research organizations from around the globe to explore national and global transformation strategies for climate change and their linkages to a range of sustainable development objectives.

CD-LINKS will advance the state-of-the-art of climate-development policy analysis and modelling in a number of areas. The project aims to have a pronounced impact on the policy dialogue, both nationally and internationally: an important outcome of the project will be a list of country-specific policy recommendations for effectively managing the long-term transformation process. These recommendations will point out opportunities for policy synergies and at the same time respect political and institutional barriers to implementation.


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Last edited: 14 December 2016

CONTACT DETAILS

Keywan Riahi

Program Director and Principal Research Scholar Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

Principal Research Scholar Integrated Assessment and Climate Change Research Group - Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

Principal Research Scholar Pollution Management Research Group - Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

Principal Research Scholar Sustainable Service Systems Research Group - Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

Volker Krey

Research Group Leader and Principal Research Scholar Integrated Assessment and Climate Change Research Group - Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

Principal Research Scholar Sustainable Service Systems Research Group - Energy, Climate, and Environment Program

CD-LINKS project

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