Skip to content
International Climate Law

International Climate Law

Teaching and research materials relating to the international law on climate change

  • The Book
  • Teaching resources
    • General resources
    • Chapter 1: Introduction
    • Chapter 2: The rationale for international action
    • Chapter 3: The UNFCCC regime
    • Chapter 4: Other regimes
    • Chapter 5: General international law
    • Chapter 6: Differentiation
    • Chapter 7: Climate change mitigation
    • Chapter 8: Flexibility mechanisms
    • Chapter 9: Geoengineering
    • Chapter 10: Climate change adaptation
    • Chapter 11: Loss and damage
    • Chapter 12: International support
    • Chapter 13: Ambition and compliance
    • Chapter 14: Adjudication
    • Chapter 15: Non-state actors
    • Chapter 16: International law in times of climate change
  • News
  • Announcements
  • About the author
Posted on 13 April 20186 August 2018 by benoitmayer

Richard Conniff, “Why Green Groups Are Split on Subsidizing Carbon Capture Technology?”

https://e360.yale.edu/features/why-green-groups-are-split-on-subsidizing-carbon-capture-technology?utm_source=EHN&utm_campaign=eb1b27c2a4-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_8573f35474-eb1b27c2a4-99406733

CategoriesNew materials Tagschapter 9

Post navigation

Previous PostPrevious M.B. Gerrard & T. Hester, Climate Engineering and the Law: Regulation and Liability for Solar Radiation Management and Carbon Dioxide Removal
Next PostNext Micahel Traut et al., “CO2 abatement goals for international shipping”

Category Specific RSS

  • Announcements
  • New materials
  • News

    Search

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Email
    Proudly powered by WordPress