Carbon Labelling and Low-Income Country Exports: A Review of the Development Issues

This article discusses the carbon accounting and carbon-labelling schemes being developed to address growing concerns over climate change. Its particular concern is their impact on small stakeholders, especially low-income countries. The popular belief that trade is by definition problematic is not...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brenton, Paul, Edwards-Jones, Gareth, Jensen, Michael Friis
Language:EN
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5452
Description
Summary:This article discusses the carbon accounting and carbon-labelling schemes being developed to address growing concerns over climate change. Its particular concern is their impact on small stakeholders, especially low-income countries. The popular belief that trade is by definition problematic is not true; carbon efficiencies elsewhere in the supply chain may more than offset emissions from transportation. Indeed, low-income countries may offer important opportunities for carbon emission reductions because of their favourable climatic conditions and use of low energy-intensive production techniques. However, their effective inclusion in labelling schemes will require innovative solutions to provide low-cost data collection and certification.