about jobs advertise write for 3p subscribe: Email / RSS / Twitter

« back to the latest from 3p

December 13, 2007

How Does Japan Lead the World in Carbon Reductions?

suit200.jpgAt the GreenXchange conference last Tuesday, Tadashi Maeda, the Director General of the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC), remarked, "Japan is the world leader in efficient use of resources, even though we import most of it." How do they do it?

Japan doesn't implement a carbon tax or have a carbon market. They rely entirely on voluntary agreements with local governments, markets, and civil society to reduce carbon output.

post-continues.gif
our-sponsor-message.gif

As a country that signed on to the original Kyoto agreement to reduce emissions to 6% below 1990 levels by 2012, Japan has made steady progress towards their goal by requesting industry leaders to voluntary implement carbon-cutting strategies. Every year the government tracks emissions levels of each sector and subsequently assesses how much more must be cut to meet the nation's goals. The majority of companies have complied using standard corporate carbon reduction strategies. Many have even been creative in their approach, allowing employees to forego their suits in summer so that buildings burn less energy through air conditioning.

One can only imagine if such an approach could work here in the U.S. As it is, several U.S. companies are already minimizing carbon emission output on a voluntary basis. If the U.S. Administration is reluctant to set a firm mandate on reductions, implement a carbon tax, or create a carbon market, then why not propose widespread voluntary measures? The E.P.A. Climate Leaders Program has demonstrated that Fortune 500 companies are ready and willing to set corporate reduction goals. Instead of being the stubborn child at the Bali table, our administration could at least agree to support voluntary reductions.



*** Follow us for free: Email / RSS / Twitter ***


email-updates.gif
Share

Comments

It's unfortunate the United States is dragging its heals to reduce carbon emissions.

» Susan Suarez at December 14, 2007 11:21 AM

Sad I missed this session (I was only there on Monday) -- The talk sounds like it was interesting and encouraging (though maybe not so much in terms of the US, considering what's happening in Bali)

» Anonymous at December 14, 2007 1:45 PM

Any emissions reductions would hurt the biggest industries' profits and hence the kicking and screaming:

oil, coal, auto

It's not just them. the big banks make money from our wasteful ways and are the biggest campaign contributors to obama, clinton and others: Citibank, Lehman Bros, JP Morgan, etc...

Plus, voluntary reductions amount to admitting fault for the current administration... Not!

» blah at December 15, 2007 12:00 PM

Join the Discussion

Be patient. You only need to click once to post your comment, which will appear soon afterwards.

(you may use HTML tags for style)

 

Remember Me?

Comments from other sites:

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.triplepundit.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2228

Related stories by keyword:

No related stories right now
From Technorati »

Categorized

» About
» Agriculture & Food
» CSR
» Clean Tech
» Climate Change
» Conflicts & Communication
» Conscious Entrepreneurship
» Eco Products
» Energy
» Green Building
» Green Careers
» Green Team
» Greenwashing
» Investment & Markets
» MBA
» Management
» Marketing & Branding
» Policy & Government
» Poverty Solutions
» Renewable Energy
» Social Enterprise
» Start Ups
» Supply Chain
» Transportation

p-buzz-logo.gif

Worth Your Time

Green Business Links

Sustainabilty

Search 3p

Latest Posts

Dated Archives





fairridge-logo.gif



ecosa.gif

3p-logo-simple.gif