The green ‘superpowers’: the climate policies of the Nordic countries

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The green ‘superpowers’ : the climate policies of the Nordic countries. / Hoff, Jens Villiam.

2016. Abstract from UACES Conference, Dublin, Ireland.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

Hoff, JV 2016, 'The green ‘superpowers’: the climate policies of the Nordic countries', UACES Conference, Dublin, Ireland, 01/06/2016 - 02/06/2016.

APA

Hoff, J. V. (2016). The green ‘superpowers’: the climate policies of the Nordic countries. Abstract from UACES Conference, Dublin, Ireland.

Vancouver

Hoff JV. The green ‘superpowers’: the climate policies of the Nordic countries. 2016. Abstract from UACES Conference, Dublin, Ireland.

Author

Hoff, Jens Villiam. / The green ‘superpowers’ : the climate policies of the Nordic countries. Abstract from UACES Conference, Dublin, Ireland.27 p.

Bibtex

@conference{e26a1d19a4fc4ee1bb2192aa9abce8f1,
title = "The green {\textquoteleft}superpowers{\textquoteright}: the climate policies of the Nordic countries",
abstract = "The Nordic countries are very often seen as leaders in climate policies; a leadership which is demonstrated both by their ambitious goals when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as renewable energy. Rather than further underpinning this claim this paper, which is a comparative study of the Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland) aims at finding the root causes of this long-time leadership. Furthermore, the article tries to explain the uniformity of the climate policies of the Nordic countries, which is quite surprising given the very different geographical/geological preconditions of the different countries. The answer to the first question is found in the combination of strong popular support of green policies, and a strong hegemonic ecological modernization discourse enabling broad compromises on ambitious climate policies by combining them with strategies for economic growth based on green technologies. In answering the second question it is firstly demonstrated that the Nordic countries are quite uniform when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as choice of policy instruments. Secondly, it is shown that this uniformity is produced by a number of different institutions constituting a framework for collaboration among the Nordic countries in the area of climate and energy policies. These institutions were found to be The Nordic Council of Ministers, the European Union, the municipalities in the Nordic countries and different market based arrangements, like for example the Scandinavian common market for electricity. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, climate policy, Nordic countries, renewable energy, welfare state, public support, local government",
author = "Hoff, {Jens Villiam}",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
language = "English",
note = "UACES Conference : Workshop on “Small European states and the politics of climate change” ; Conference date: 01-06-2016 Through 02-06-2016",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The green ‘superpowers’

T2 - UACES Conference

AU - Hoff, Jens Villiam

PY - 2016/6

Y1 - 2016/6

N2 - The Nordic countries are very often seen as leaders in climate policies; a leadership which is demonstrated both by their ambitious goals when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as renewable energy. Rather than further underpinning this claim this paper, which is a comparative study of the Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland) aims at finding the root causes of this long-time leadership. Furthermore, the article tries to explain the uniformity of the climate policies of the Nordic countries, which is quite surprising given the very different geographical/geological preconditions of the different countries. The answer to the first question is found in the combination of strong popular support of green policies, and a strong hegemonic ecological modernization discourse enabling broad compromises on ambitious climate policies by combining them with strategies for economic growth based on green technologies. In answering the second question it is firstly demonstrated that the Nordic countries are quite uniform when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as choice of policy instruments. Secondly, it is shown that this uniformity is produced by a number of different institutions constituting a framework for collaboration among the Nordic countries in the area of climate and energy policies. These institutions were found to be The Nordic Council of Ministers, the European Union, the municipalities in the Nordic countries and different market based arrangements, like for example the Scandinavian common market for electricity.

AB - The Nordic countries are very often seen as leaders in climate policies; a leadership which is demonstrated both by their ambitious goals when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as renewable energy. Rather than further underpinning this claim this paper, which is a comparative study of the Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland) aims at finding the root causes of this long-time leadership. Furthermore, the article tries to explain the uniformity of the climate policies of the Nordic countries, which is quite surprising given the very different geographical/geological preconditions of the different countries. The answer to the first question is found in the combination of strong popular support of green policies, and a strong hegemonic ecological modernization discourse enabling broad compromises on ambitious climate policies by combining them with strategies for economic growth based on green technologies. In answering the second question it is firstly demonstrated that the Nordic countries are quite uniform when it comes to GHG reduction targets as well as choice of policy instruments. Secondly, it is shown that this uniformity is produced by a number of different institutions constituting a framework for collaboration among the Nordic countries in the area of climate and energy policies. These institutions were found to be The Nordic Council of Ministers, the European Union, the municipalities in the Nordic countries and different market based arrangements, like for example the Scandinavian common market for electricity.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - climate policy

KW - Nordic countries

KW - renewable energy

KW - welfare state

KW - public support

KW - local government

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 1 June 2016 through 2 June 2016

ER -

ID: 185903955