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April 3, 2008 |  Print | E-Mail Atlantic Faces  

Sascha Müller-Kraenner, European Representative of The Nature Conservancy

Foreign policy, European integration and environmental policy are subjects of predilection for Sascha Müller-Kraenner and questions on which he has extensively published in the past. He previously worked for the Heinrich Böll Foundation as director for Europe/North America, head of the program on foreign and security policy, and founding director for the North American office in Washington DC. He is now the European Representative of The Nature Conservancy, a leading international conservation organization with over one million members and active in more than thirty countries. He is also a Senior Policy Advisor to Ecologic, the Berlin based institute for international and European environmental policy. In the spring of 2007 he published a book entitled "Energiesicherheit - Die neue Vermessung der Welt," which focused on energy security. An English language version will be published by Earthscan (London) in autumn 2008.

1. You noted in your Op-Ed on atlantic-community.org the importance of strengthening the transatlantic relationship with regard to climate change. How would you suggest going about strengthening this relationship?

The next US administration has to start its term with a clear signal that America will re-engage with the negotiations for a comprehensive global climate change agreement in the UN context. The US will have to give up side tracks, as their so called "major emitters" approach, that have deliberately tried to undermine the UN process.

Europe, on the other hand, has to make clear that a functioning transatlantic policy coordination, ranging from common market rules to the support for technological breakthroughs in areas from renewables to carbon capture and storage, remains the basis of global leadership on the climate issue. The European emission trading system (EU ETS) is a prime example of common political and intellectual leadership. The idea was conceived by the US, first implemented in the EU, and should now be expanded into the transatlantic space.


2. What are your priorities for the Nature Conservancy and Ecologic? How do these organizations contribute to the success of international summits such as Bali?

The Nature Conservancy (TNC) is one of the major conservation organisations worldwide. We supportpolicy changes as well as on the ground sustainable development projects in countries ranging from the US to Brazil, and from Africa to China. Climate change has emerged as the biggest challenge both for human development and for conservation. In the US, The Nature Conservancy supports comprehensive climate change legislation and wants to introduce a national cap and trade system that allows progressive reductions of greenhouse gas emissions and builds a functioning carbon market. Another major priority of the organisation is to use the power of carbon markets to channel funds to the urgent task of tropical forest protection and climate change adaptation in developing countries.

Ecologic is a private not-for-profit think tank for applied environmental research, policy analysis and consultancy with offices in Berlin, Brussels, Vienna and - soon - Washington DC. An independent, non-partisan body, Ecologic is dedicated to bringing fresh ideas to environmental policies and sustainable development. Ecologic's work programme focuses on obtaining practical results. It covers the entire spectrum of environmental issues, including the integration of environmental concerns into other policy fields. Founded in 1995, Ecologic is a partner in the network of Institutes for European Environmental Policy.


3. According to a recent survey presented by the British Council, the environment is the number one international topic of concern in both the US and in many European countries. If this is the case, why are many governments, especially the present US administration, so hesitant to make meaningful commitments and accept responsibility for climate change?

The recent reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and popular works like Al Gore's movie "An Inconvenient Truth" have convinced many European and American citizens of the urgency of the climate problem. They demand from their politicians to act. The Bush administration has been slower to realise this than most European governments.

However, annother inconvenient truth is, that the necessary actions to address climate change will demand a real political and financial effort, including strong market incentives as the European emission trading system, massive support for new technologies, and a move away from our car based transport system. Those measuers will all help to modernise our economies and make them even stronger. However, they will also hurt entrenched economic and interests and therefore demand strong political leadership based on conviction and a profound knowledge of the long term effects our actions have on the climate system.

 

 
 
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