OECD WORK ON ENVIRONMENT

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "OECD WORK ON ENVIRONMENT"

Transcription

1 OECD WORK ON ENVIRONMENT

2 OECD WORK ON environment 12 The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 13 Preface: Aligning Policies for the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy 14 Peer Reviews, Indicators and Outlooks 18 Climate Change 12 Biodiversity 15 Water 18 Nitrogen Management 20 Environmental Policies and Economic Outcomes 23 Environmental Policy Tools and Evaluation 26 Resource Productivity and Waste 28 Sectoral Policies: Transport, Agriculture 30 Safety of Chemicals, Pesticides, Biotechnology & Nanomaterials 33 Environment in the Global Economy 36 Green Growth 42 The Committee Structures 43 EPOC Organigramme 44 Environment Directorate (ENV) Structure 48 Selected Databases

3 2 Member countries The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Australia Austria Belgium Canada Chile Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Israel Italy Japan Korea Luxembourg Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland Portugal Slovak Republic Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Turkey United Kingdom United States The OECD, which traces its roots to the Marshall Plan, groups 34 member countries committed to democratic government and the market economy. It provides a forum where governments can compare and exchange policy experiences, identify good practices and adopt decisions and recommendations. Dialogue, consensus, and peer review and pressure are at the very heart of the OECD. OECD accession discussions are currently under way with Colombia and Latvia. In addition, enhanced co-operation programs are in place with Costa Rica and Lithuania and Country Programmes have been launched with Peru and Kazakhstan. Efforts are also made to enhance engagement with Key Partners such as Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and South Africa. The OECD is working for a stronger, cleaner and fairer world economy. The principal aim of the Organisation is to promote policies for sustainable economic growth and employment, a rising standard of living, and trade liberalisation. By sustainable economic growth the OECD means growth that balances economic, social and environmental considerations. The OECD is one of the world s largest and most reliable sources of comparable statistical, economic and social data. It monitors trends, collects data, analyses and forecasts economic development, and investigates evolving patterns in a broad range of public policy areas such as agriculture, development co-operation, education, employment, taxation and trade, science, technology, industry and innovation in addition to environment. The OECD family of organisations also includes the International Energy Agency (IEA), the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), and the International Transport Forum (ITF).

4 OECD work on Environment 3 Preface: Aligning policies for the transition to a low-carbon economy Keeping the global temperature increase to less then 2 C means moving to net-zero emissions of greenhouse gas emissions from energy, industry, transport and land use in the second half of this century. Angel Gurría OECD Secretary-General Climate change is one of the most pervasive risks that the global economy faces today. Moving to a low-carbon economy is the only way to tackle rising global temperatures. It will require unprecedented policy-driven changes with far-reaching economic, social and technological implications. This necessary transformation will have to take place alongside the significant climatic change that is already locked in by past emissions and investments. In addition, the world s population is both growing and ageing, as well as rapidly urbanising, hence posing an even greater challenge to our efforts to achieve zero net emissions in the second half of this century. This goal is achievable, but it will not happen by itself. It will require dedicated policy instruments and a supportive regulatory environment. This year, we will be delivering a joint report with the International Energy Agency (IEA), the International Transport Forum (ITF), and the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) that examines how to better align policies across different areas for a successful economic transition of all countries to sustainable low-carbon and climate-resilient economies. In the spirit of having a horizontal approach to promoting green growth, we are taking a broad look at policies across different areas, including investment, taxation and trade, as well as key sectors such as electricity markets, land-use and mobility. Our mission will be to continue to identify and promote policy options that can bring about a lasting transformation towards a low-carbon global economy.

5 4 Peer Reviews, Indicators and Outlooks Monitoring and analysing key environmental challenges, now and in the future Environmental Performance Reviews (EPRs) The EPRs examine countries progress towards their domestic and international environmental policy commitments, and provide policy recommendations. The EPRs aim to promote peer learning, enhance governments accountability and improve countries environmental performance. The analyses presented are supported by a broad range of economic and environmental data. Each EPR is organised in two parts. The first part, common to all reviews, presents key environmental trends, the institutional and policy framework for environmental management and progress towards green growth. The second part provides an in-depth analysis of two topics selected by the reviewed country. The Working Party for Environmental Performance, made up of representatives of all 34 OECD governments and the European Commission, endorses the assessment and recommendations section of the EPRs, a central element of the peer review process. During , reviews of Poland, Spain, Brazil, the Netherlands, France, Chile, Korea and New Zealand will be either released or prepared. Topics for in-depth analysis in EPRs In-depth chapters Biodiversity (and forestry) Climate change (and air quality) Waste and materials management Energy and environment Water management Chemicals management Tourism and environment Sustainable mobility Multi-level environmental governance Marine ecosystem services Environmental performance of industry Environmental innovation Coastal zone management Climate change adaptation Agriculture and environment Key publications OECD Environmental Performance Reviews: Brazil, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain (2015) Chile, France (2016) Number of EPRs ( ) Environmental information, data and indicators The OECD provides harmonised international data and indicators on the environment, and works with countries to improve their environmental information systems and

6 OECD work on Environment 5...that by 2020 most OECD countries did you know will have undergone an environmental performance review three times, with key partner countries such as China, Russia, Colombia and South Africa also the subject of review? establish effective mechanisms to inform the public and decision-makers. The data, collected from countries and international sources, are treated, harmonised and their quality checked with countries. They are then used in analytical and evaluative work and serve as a basis for calculating indicators. The OECD has several indicator sets to monitor environmental performance, policy integration, resource productivity and progress towards green growth. A subset of key environmental indicators was endorsed by OECD Environment Ministers. The OECD measurement framework and its guidance for selecting and using indicators, are a reference for many countries. The indicators are used in country reviews and policy analysis, and their quality improved continuously. Work is underway to further develop indicators on carbon and material productivity, nitrogen flows, land cover, and population exposure to air pollution. To generate better information on the interactions between the economy and the environment, the OECD supports the implementation of the System of Environmental Economic Accounting (SEEA). A dedicated Task Force has been established jointly with the OECD Statistics Directorate. Environmental trends and GDP growth, OECD, % change, GDP Municipal waste Generation Disposal Recovery SOx Source: OECD Environment Statistics, OECD, 2014 Air and greenhouse gas emissions Key Publications Towards Green Growth? Tracking Progress (2015) Material Resources, Productivity and the Environment (2015) Environment at a Glance (2015) Environmental Indicators Country Profiles: CO NMVOC NOx GHG

7 6 Environmental outlooks The OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050 was the primary input to the OECD meeting of Environment Ministers in April Based on economic-environmental modelling, the Outlook looks towards 2050 to analyse the consequences of policy inaction in four priority areas: climate change, biodiversity, water, and health impacts of pollution and chemicals. It provides analyses of economic and environmental trends to 2050, and simulations of policy actions to address the key challenges. did you know that almost four billion people will live in severely water-stressed river basins by 2050 if better policies are not introduced? Key Publications OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: Consequences of Inaction (2012) OECD Environmental Outlook to 2030 (2008)

8 OECD work on Environment 7 The CIRCLE project The Cost of Inaction and Resource Scarcity; Consequences for Long-term Economic Growth (CIRCLE) project aims to identify how feedbacks from poor environmental quality, climatic change and natural resource scarcity are likely to affect economic growth in the coming decades. Over a series of model developments, CIRCLE will generate reference projections for economic growth that reflect the costs of policy inaction. These reference projections will help to improve future OECD projections of economic growth, as well as assessments of the economics of environmental policies, as they are able to include not only costs but also benefits of policy action in terms of reduced environmental damages. This will allow a more informed evaluation of policy options, and a comparison of the costs and benefits involved. The first track of the CIRCLE project is a quantitative analysis of the economic feedbacks of climate change, air pollution and the nexus between land, water and energy. The core tool to be used in the analysis is the OECD s dynamic global multi-sector, multi-region model ENV-Linkages, which will be coupled to biophysical models for an integrated assessment. Using a systems approach allows focusing on interactions between the various environmental challenges. The second track scopes the possibilities to quantitatively assess water-economy linkages, the economic feedbacks of loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services and resource scarcity. If possible, these themes will also be included in the modelling track at a later stage. First results for the assessment of the economic feedbacks of climate change damages have been included in the OECD horizontal report on OECD@100. A more comprehensive assessment of the economic consequences of climate change is expected to be published in September In , reports for the other themes covered in CIRCLE are also expected to be published. Key Publications Economic Consequences of Climate Change Damage (2015) Consequences of Climate Change Impacts for Economic Growth: A Dynamic Quatitative Assessment (2014) CIRCLE Costs of Inaction and Resource scarcity: Consequences for Long-term Economic growth

9 8 Climate Change Responding to complexity with analysis of least-cost policies Economics of climate change mitigation The OECD is assessing the economic costs and benefits of climate policies. Our analysis focuses on least-cost policy mixes to reduce emissions, the benefits of linking carbon markets, phasing out fossil fuel subsidies, ensuring sufficient financing, and how to address concerns about carbon leakage and competitiveness impacts of climate policies. The Environmental Outlook to 2050 makes projections of climate change, as well as environmental and economic impacts of climate policies. Equity considerations have gained prominence in the face of current economic and financial challenges. New work will examine the distributional consequences of carbon taxes by household types, sectors or regions. The OECD, together with the IEA, provides the Secretariat to support the Climate Change Expert Group, a non-negotiating forum where climate negotiators can discuss key issues on the negotiating agenda. There is a large body of work on the measurement, reporting and verification (MRV) of mitigation actions and support; finance and matching of finance to action; low-emission development strategies; and market mechanisms including sectoral approaches for mitigation and market readiness. The OECD helps countries identify and implement effective and efficient policy mixes to meet their climate commitments through analyses of the broad policy mix (economic instruments, regulations, incentives for technological innovation) as well as advice on how to best implement policy reforms. Key Publications Built to Last: Designing a Flexible and Durable 2015 Climate Change Agreement (2014) The Role of the 2015 Agreement in Mobilising Climate Finance (2014) OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction (2012)

10 OECD work on Environment 9 Adaptation to climate change Efforts to reduce GHG emissions need to be complemented with policies and incentives to adapt to the effects of a changing climate. The OECD is working to support governments in planning and implementing effective, efficient and equitable adaptation policies. Regional adaptation cost curves Adaptation costs (percentage GDP) 2.5 India 2.0 Sub-Saharan Africa Western Europe 1.5 Low-middle income countries 1.0 Middle income countries 0.5 United States Japan 0 China Adaptation (as a fraction of gross damages reduced) Source: Based on the AD-RICE model. The OECD is examining how economic analysis can inform adaptation responses. The majority of OECD countries have developed national strategies to prepare for climate change. Analysis of progress to date has emphasised the need to improve decision makers ability to understand and use climate data to make decisions that are robust in the context of uncertainty about the future. OECD analysis also examines the roles of innovation and the private sector in driving adaptation. A pioneering 2011 report focused on the private sector s engagement in adaptation, including factors that act as incentives or barriers to action. OECD research examining trends in innovation to develop more climate-resilient crops indicates rapidly increasing interest in the field in recent decades. The OECD supports countries and development co-operation agencies to manage adaptation as part of development activities. The report on National Climate Change Adaptation: Emerging Practices in Monitoring and Evaluation (2015) identifies four key tools that can be used to enhance learning and assess countries progress in adapting to climate change. Analysis of climate resilience in development planning shows how countries are taking concrete steps to build resilience to climate change. Two country case studies, Ethiopia and Colombia, are explored in detail. Key Publications Economics of Adaptation: Moving from Theory to Practice (2015) Climate Change Adaptation: Emerging Practices in Monitoring and Evaluation (2015) Climate Resilience in Development Planning: Lessons from Colombia and Ethiopia (2014) Designing and Implementing National Adaptation Planning Lessons from OECD Countries (2013)

11 10 Financing action on climate change Public and private financing for climate action needs to be scaled up significantly in the coming years to ensure that the goal of holding global warming below two degrees (2 C) is achieved. Successfully tackling climate change also requires urgent action to scale-up and shift existing public and private investments towards low-carbon and climateresilient (LCR) infrastructure. Choices made today on the types and location of critical infrastructure will lock in future emission levels and the resilience of our economies to a changing climate. A broad range of policy interventions are needed. Given the current strains on public finance, mobilising investment in LCR infrastructure will require leveraging both domestic and international private investment, including institutional investors, who currently only allocate a small percentage of their assets to infrastructure. The OECD s Policy Guidance for Investment in Clean Energy Infrastructure is a non-prescriptive tool to help policy makers identify ways to mobilise private investment in clean energy infrastructure. In partnership with interested countries, the Policy Guidance is now being applied to specific country contexts in Clean Energy Investment Policy Reviews currently being launched. In OECD countries, instititutional did you know investors such as pension funds and insurance companies held USD 93 trillion in assets in Direct investment in infrastructure project of all types accounted for only 1% of large OECD Pension Fund asset allocation in Large pension fund allocation to sustainable energy investment was much smaller - only 3% of that 1% share. conditions to scale-up private investment in LCR infrastructure. A publication in 2015 will gather lessons from case studies to provide guidance to policy makers. During the 2014 meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level, Ministers asked the OECD, the International Energy Agency (IEA), the International Transport Forum (ITF) and the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) to offer Member and Partner countries guidance on how to best align policies for the transition to a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy. The draft final Report will be presented during the 2015 MCM and will point to a range of areas where policies could be aligned to facilitate the low-carbon transition. Deliberately or not, our regulatory and fiscal policies have been wired around a fossil fuel world. Not only have our economies locked-in carbon-intensive behaviours, they The OECD has also developed a Green Investment Policy Framework to help governments to improve enabling

12 OECD work on Environment 11 have also locked in carbon-friendly policies. The Aligning Policies for the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy (APT) project outputs will help inform discussions leading to the COP 21 meeting in Paris (2015). Fossil-fuel support measures In 2013, the OECD identified and inventoried over 550 individual support mechanisms that directly or indirectly encourage the production or consumption of fossil fuels across its member countries (OECD, 2013). The overall value of these support measures was then estimated to be between USD 55 and USD 90 billion per year for the period Work is currently underway to update this information and extend the exercise to major emerging economies (e.g. Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Russia, and did you know that removing fossil fuel consumption subsidies could cut world GHG emissions by at least 10% in 2050? South Africa) for release in 2015 (OECD, 2015 forthcoming). In addition, the IEA estimates the value of fossil-fuel consumption subsidies in developing and emerging economies to be USD 548 billion (IEA, 2014). Key Publications Aligning Policies for the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy (2015) Mapping Channels to Mobilise Institutional Investment in Sustainable Energy (2015) Policy Guidance for Investment in Clean Energy Infrastructure: Expanding Access to Clean Energy for Green Growth and Development (2015) Overcoming the Barriers to International Investment in Clean Energy (2015) Inventory of Estimated Budgetary Support and Tax Expenditures for Fossil Fuels (2015, 2013) IEA World Energy Outlook (2014) Institutional Investors and Green Infrastrcuture Investment: Selected Case Studies (2013) Effective Carbon Prices (2013)

13 12 Biodiversity Promoting conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and ecosystems Economics of biodiversity Biodiversity loss is one of the four priority areas featured in the OECD Environmental Outlook to OECD analysis focuses on the economic aspects of biodiversity enhancing understanding of how biodiversity and ecosystems can be valued, and how these values can be captured through policy instruments and incentives to support biodiversity conservation and sustainable use. The objective is to promote policies that are environmentally effective, economically efficient and distributionally equitable. OECD work on biodiversity also supports the work of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. Given recent and projected trends in biodiversity loss and degradation, there is an urgent need for: greater and more ambitious use of policies including economic instruments; more cost-effective use of existing finance for biodiversity and indicators to monitor progress; and mainstreaming of biodiversity in other sectors of the economy. Work has, for example, focused on the effective design and implementation of biodiversity offsets. Scaling up biodiversity instruments Recent OECD work has focused on financing mechanisms for biodiversity, including how to better engage the private sector. This work examines lessons learned from existing biodiversity instruments, such as payments for ecosystem services (PES), and environmental fiscal reform, to provide insights on how such instruments can be scaled up. In , work will focus on the economics of marine biodiversity, including marine protected areas. Sources of loss in Mean Species Abundance (MSA) to 2050 MSA, (%) OECD BRIICS RoW World Infr+encr+frag Climate change Nitrogen Former land-use Forestry Pasture Bioenergy Food crop Remaining MSA Note: 100% MSA implies an undisturbed state. Infr+encr+frag: Infrastructure + encrouchment + fragmentation Source: OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE

14 OECD work on Environment 13 Monitoring and evaluation A key challenge in efficiently allocating biodiversity finance is the need to ensure appropriate design and implementation of biodiversity instruments so as to best achieve their intended goals. This includes the need to develop appropriate indicators for biodiversity instruments, and ensuring robust monitoring and reporting frameworks. Indicators, for example, are critical to assess trends, establish business-as-usual baselines, quantify benefits, target biodiversity expenditures and enable the assessment of policy interventions over time. Recent work is looking at policy response indicators for biodiversity, for incentives (Aichi Target 3) and for resource mobilisation (Aichi Target 20). Mainstreaming biodiversity into sectoral and development policies The drivers of biodiversity loss and degradation often stem from policies in other sectors and areas such as agriculture, fisheries, forestry, and climate change. Linkages between biodiversity and other sectoral policies are complex and greater efforts are needed to mainstream biodiversity into decision-making processes across the economy. In , OECD analysis will focus on how to enhance synergies and address trade-offs between biodiversity and development policy, including development co-operation. The OECD also monitors external development finance targeting biodiversity objectives through its Creditor Reporting System using the biodiversity Rio Marker. This is one of five statistical policy markers used by the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) to monitor external development finance for environmental purposes. In , total bilateral biodiversity-related aid commitments by OECD DAC members allocated about USD 5.6 billion on average per year, representing 4.4% of total bilateral official development assistance (ODA). Key Publications The Economics of Marine Biodiversity (2016) Mainstreaming Biodiversity into Development (2016) Biodiversity Offsets: Effective Design and Implementation (2015) Biodiversity Policy Response Indicators (2015) The Role of National Ecosystem Assessments in Influencing Policy Making (2014) Scaling up Finance Mechanisms for Biodiversity (2013) OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction (2012) did you know that biodiversity is projected to decline by a further 10% by 2050 without more ambitious policies to protect it?

15 14 Principal Significant % of total ODA 6 5% 5% Biodiversity-related official development assistance (ODA) 5 4% % 3% 3% 2% 2% 1% 1% 0%

16 Water Achieving water security OECD Horizontal programme on water This programme is undertaken by the Environment Policy Committee (EPOC) in partnership with the Agriculture, Regional Development Policy, Regulatory Policy and Development Assistance Committees. Work in synthesises recent OECD work on water and will develop a recommendation of the OECD Council on water resources management. The recommendation will provide comprehensive guidance for the reform of water policies in OECD and partner countries. A major horizonatal report, Water and Cities: Ensuring Sustainable Futures (2015), focuses on the urban water management challenge. It provides policy guidance on sustainable urban water financing, urban-rural water linkages, urban water governance and innovation. OECD work on Environment Environment for Better Lives (2013) identified innovative approaches for dealing with water risks. It has informed work on water in the context of adaptation to climate change, and on water allocation mechanisms. Water resources allocation is gaining traction as an issue. Water is already over-allocated in a number of basins, and the OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050 projects the situation will become more severe, as demand for water keeps expanding and uncertainty about future water availability grows. The report Water Resource Allocation: Sharing Risks and Opportunities (2015) provides guidance on the design and the reform of water allocation regimes. It proposes a Health Check to assess robustness of existing regimes. Work in focuses on the management of water quality, with an emphasis on policy instruments and on urban water pollution. Further work is being undertaken on sustainable management of water in agriculture, more specifically on groundwater use in agriculture and on policy approaches to droughts and floods. 15 The economics and governance of water Increased levels of water security contribute to economic growth and development. However, achieving water security is complex and requires governments to address and manage a range of water-related risks (scarcity, floods, pollution, eco-system resilience). The report Water Security The Global Dialogue on Water Security and Sustainable Growth, a joint initiative by the OECD and the Global Water Partnership, emphasises the importance of water security for growth. It highlights stylised development pathways that countries can follow, based on their water resources endowment and on their investments in infrastructures and institutions.

17 16 OECD work on the critical area of financing for water services, water management and water infrastructure continues. A key element of this is a joint initiative with the World Water Council on financing infrastructures for a water-secure world. The OECD Water Governance Initiative was set up as an international multi-stakeholder network where delegates from public, private and not-for-profit sectors share good practices in support of governance in the water sector. It has led to the development of the draft OECD Principles on Water Governance, which will be considered by the OECD s Council in The governance of water regulators is also a major focus of OECD work. The OECD is a key implementing partner of the European Union Water Initiative (EUWI) in ten countries of Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA). Ongoing policy reforms in the region aim at sustainable water resources management, better water supply and sanitation systems, and enhanced transboundary co-operation on water basins. from international practitioners, in the framework of national policy dialogues on water. Water Policy Dialogues have so far been undertaken in Mexico, the Netherlands and Brazil. They have helped to inform the water policy reform agenda. Ten countries of Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA, comprising of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine) are currently adopting a range of policy reforms with regard to water management under the National Policy Dialogues in cooperation with the EU Water Initiative (see also the section on Environment and Development in EECCA)..that did you a majority know......that a majority of water allocation regimes surveyed by the OECD have an abstraction charge? However, in a majority of cases, the abstraction charge does not reflect water scarcity. National policy dialogues on water The OECD supports ambitious water policy reforms in selected countries, on demand. These combine robust analyses of water economics and governance with insights

18 OECD work on Environment 17 Key Publications Water and Cities: Ensuring Sustainable Futures (2015) Water Resources Allocation: Sharing Risks and Opportunities (2015) OECD Principles on Water Governance (2015) Policies to Manage Floods and Droughts in Agriculture (2015) Groundwater Use in Agriculture in OECD countries (2015) Climate Change, Water and Agriculture: Toward Resilient Systems (2014) Water Governance in the Netherlands: Fit for Future Challenges (2014) Climate Change, Water and Agriculture: Toward Resilient Systems (2014) Water Governance in Turnisia, and in Jordan: Overcoming the Challenges to Private Sector Participation (2014) Water Policy Reforms in Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia: Achievements of the European Union Water Initiative since 2006 (2014) Water Security for Better Lives (2013) Water and Climate Change Adaptation: Policies to Navigate Unchartered Waters (2013) Meeting the Water Reform Challenge (2012) Managing Water for All: An OECD Perspective on Pricing and Financing (2009) Global water demand Km OECD BRIICS RoW World Electricity Manufacturing Livestock Domestic Irrigation

19 18 Nitrogen Management Developing a framework for nitrogen management policies Addressing human impacts on the nitrogen cycle In its unreactive form, nitrogen is abundant, making up nearly 80% of the earth s atmosphere. But all known forms of life need nitrogen in a reactive (fixed) form that is bonded to carbon, hydrogen, or oxygen, most often as organic nitrogen compounds (such as amino acids), ammonium, or nitrate. For example, reactive nitrogen is an essential input for plants to grow and thus to food production. Since the 1950s and as part of efforts to achieve food and energy security, reactive nitrogen production has greatly increased, causing unprecedented changes to the global nitrogen cycle. This is largely due to the increased production of nitrogen fertiliser, by far the largest human source of reactive nitrogen. During the twentieth century, mankind has also produced increasingly other forms of reactive nitrogen as a by-product of combusting fossil fuels and as a component of wastewater. The abundance of anthropogenic sources of nitrogen in terrestrial, aquatic and atmospheric ecosystems has adverse effects on public health and the environment. For example, ocean dead zones are rapidly increasing because of excess nutrients (and warming waters). There are more than 400 ocean dead zones in the world seas today (from 20 in the 1950s). And the outlook is grim, as rivers discharges of nutrients into the sea are projected to continue increasing (see Figure on next page). The OECD project on the human impacts on the nitrogen cycle, supported by the OECD Nitrogen Expert Group, is assessing the use of different policy instruments to manage the unwanted release of nitrogen. The nitrogen project aims to take a holistic view of nitrogen policies across a wide range of emitting sectors, including agriculture, energy, industry, transport and households. Work in 2014 provided a conceptual framework for the analysis of nitrogen policies and surveyed country policies. Based on country case studies, will provide in-depth analysis of instruments and instrument mixes to address atmospheric pollution (e.g. smog and ground level ozone) and water pollution (e.g. eutrophication), and review and assess the coherence of nitrogen-specific policies with broader agricultural, wastewater and transport aims.

20 OECD work on Environment 19 Work is also underway to monitor economy-wide nitrogen flows and develop nitrogen indicators for use in green growth studies and in policy evaluation. Key Publication Policy Instruments to Manage the Unwanted Release of Nitrogen into Ecosystems (2016) River discharges of nitrogen into the sea Millions of tonnes of N per year Arctic Ocean Atlantic Ocean Indian Ocean Medit + Black Sea Pacific Ocean Source: OECD (2012), Water, in OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction, OECD Publishing, DOI:

21 20 Environmental Policies and Economic Outcomes Ongoing empirical work sheds light on the economic effects of environmental policies The effects of environmental policies on economic performance are a subject of heated debate. On the one hand, environmental policies have been argued to burden economic activity, as they raise costs without increasing output and restrict the set of production technologies and outputs. On the other hand, the Porter Hypothesis claims that well-designed environmental policies can encourage innovation, gains in efficiency and profitability, which can outweigh the costs of compliance. Empirical investigations so far have been constrained by the lack of internationally comparable measures of environmental policies. Joint work between the OECD Environment Directorate and the Economics Department on Environmental Policies and Productivity Growth has laid the ground for empirical analyses of the economic effects of environmental policies. It provided quantitative proxies measuring the stringency and competition-friendliness of environmental policies. In particular, the newly-developed indicator of Environmental Policy Stringency (EPS) provided a comparable, crosscountry and over-time measure of the aggregate stringency of selected environmental policy instruments (see Figure). The stringency of environmental policies has been increasing across the OECD Indicator value Indicator value /1995 OECD average More stringent The new EPS indicator was used in empirical analysis to gauge the effects on multifactor productivity growth at the macroeconomic, industry and firm levels. Importantly, effects of tightening environmental policies were found to be relatively short-lasting with no evidence of harm to overall productivity growth. They did not depend on how stringent the policies were already, but were found to strongly depend on the firms (and industries ) technological

22 OECD work on Environment 21 advancement. Moreover, the work provided some evidence that flexible, market-based instruments, such as taxes, are more supportive to productivity growth. Importantly, some aspects of environmental policy design may create additional administrative burdens or advantages to existing companies and industries. The work provided cross-country evidence that stringent environmental policies can be designed in ways that are more (or less) friendly to new firm entry and competition - as captured by the Burdens on the Economy due to Environmental Policies (BEEP) indicator (see Figure). International evidence shows that such aspects can and should be minimised, in particular as achieving both environmental and economic objectives needs new, cleaner ideas, technologies and business models to develop. The BEEP indicator and measures of environmental policy stringency More stringent environmental policies OECD EPS (de jure, 2012) DNK NLD CHE NOR AUT SWE CAN KOR POL JPN USA GBR FRA AUS BEL IRL GRC PRT DEU ESP ITA HUN Policies more burdensome to entry and competition Total BEEP indicator WEF EPS (perceived, 2012) 7 Note: The top panel compares the Environmental Policy Stringency indicator (see Botta and Kozluk, 2014) and the Burdens on the Economy due to Environmental Policies Indicator (Kozluk, 2014). The bottom panel compares the World Economic Forum Executive Opinion Survey responses on how stringent is environmental regulation in a given country perceived to be. Scatterplots represent the most recent values: 2012 for environmental policy stringency, beginning 2013 for BEEP. More stringent environmental policies AUT CHE DNK DEU JPN SWE NLD NZL NOR BEL AUS IRL GBR EST ISL USA CZE FRA PRT CAN SVN POL HUN ISR ESP SVK ZAF KOR CHL ITA HRV MEX TUR GRC Policies more burdensome to entry and competition Total BEEP indicator

23 22 Better understanding of how environmental policies affect business behaviour such as decisions to engage in investment (locally or internationally), innovation, trade or to relocate is fundamental for developing more effective and less costly green growth policies and smarter regulations. In , work will focus on further data collection to improve and extend the Environmental Policy Stringency indicator to allow deeper and broader empirical analysis. Firm and industry level data will also be explored. Empirical analysis will also be extended to other determinants of GDP per capita across domestic and international dimensions. Key Publications Economic Policy Reform 2015: Going for Growth (2015) Do Environmental Policies Matter for Productivity Growth? Insights from new Cross-Country Measures of Environmental Policies (2014) Empirical Evidence on the Effects of Environmental Policy Stringency on Productivity Growth (2014) Measuring Environmental Policy Stringency in OECD Countries A Composite Index Approach (2014) The Indicator of Economic Burdens of Environmental Policy Design Results from the OECD Questionnaire (2014) Environmental Policies and Productivity Growth: A Critical Review of Empirical Findings (2014)

24 OECD work on Environment 23 Environmental Policy Tools and Evaluation Ensuring policies are economically efficient and environmentally effective Economic instruments and policy mixes The OECD undertakes fact-based analysis of policy instruments and mixes of instruments to help governments design and implement environmentally effective and economically efficient policies. The OECD s focus on policy instruments such as taxes, tradable permits and voluntary approaches, as well as regulation, makes an important contribution to integrating environmental protection and economic growth. The OECD is developing in-depth and detailed analyses of the taxation of energy use, as well as support to fossil fuels extraction or use in member and partner countries. This information will be updated and expanded further in and will be extended with analytical work on reform. Policy evaluation Recent work on policy evaluation has focused on an analysis of the costs to society of outdoor air pollution. It found that in 2010 these costs amounted to USD 1.7 trillion for OECD countries. For China, the costs were estimated at USD 1.3 trillion, and for India, USD 0.5 trillion. Work in focuses on developing more refined methods for assessing the morbidity-related costs of air pollution and other environmental pressures. Analyses have been made of the income distribution impacts of different categories of energy taxes. In , this work will be deepened further, with analyses of approaches to address negative impacts of energy and water pricing. A project on effective carbon prices estimated the costs to society per tonne of CO 2 eq abated using different policy instruments in selected sectors. It showed clearly that these costs were lower for taxes and emission trading systems than for other instrument categories.

25 24 EUR per litre OECD work on environmental compliance assurance has reviewed how governments promote, monitor and enforce compliance with environmental laws and regulations. Further work in will focus on performance indicators and mechanisms to promote national coherence in environmental enforcement. Tax rates per litre of unleaded petrol and diesel in selected OECD member countries Petrol Diesel Key Publications Cost-Benefit Analyses and the Environment: Recent Developments (2016) The Cost of Air Pollution: Health Impacts of Road Transport (2014) Effective Carbon Prices (2013) Spatial Planning Instruments and the Enviroment (SPINE) In , OECD work focuses on the evaluation of the effectiveness of spatial planning instruments in achieving environmental and economic objectives. This evaluation relies on empirical analysis of the identification of the effects of different forms of urban structure on human exposure to air pollutants; the effectiveness of spatial policies in containing urban sprawl and in mitigating the risks of natural hazards and preventing their consequences; and the impact of open space conservation policies on housing and land prices, development density, and local government budgets. Source: OECD database on environmental policy instruments The development of an operational framework describing land use patterns and their environmental and economic implications, and an inventory and typology of spatial planning systems and land use policy instruments used across OECD countries, will pave the way for empirical analysis.

26 OECD work on Environment 25 Households and the environment OECD work provides new insights to better understand households environmental behaviour and how policies affect their decisions in the real world. A periodic survey on Environmental Policy and Individual Behaviour Change (EPIC) of more than respondents across a number of countries provides empirical evidence to improve the design of environmental policies in residential energy use, water consumption, transport, organic food, and waste generation and recycling. A report on the survey published in 2014 analysed the relationship between public policy, household attitudes and norms, and decisions with significant environmental consequences. For example, public opinion can impose significant constraints on the use of environmental taxes and financial incentives. In , empirical work in this area focuses on the analysis of the spillover effects of electricity pricing policies on household green investment, and the analysis of the impact of urban structure on individual life satisfaction. that households exposure to did you know environmental taxes can enhance public support for them: households charged by weight or volume of waste generated express greater support for such systems than those not facing unit based waste charges? Key Publications Greening Household Behaviour: Overview from the 2011 Survey - Revised edition (2014) Greening Household Behaviour: A Review for Policy Makers (2014) Greening Household Behaviour: Energy, Food, Transport, Waste, Water (2014)

27 26 Resource Productivity and Waste Reducing, reusing and recycling materials and resources Sustainable materials management and waste The OECD is developing policies that incentivise and encourage waste prevention, minimisation and recycling. Current work focuses on promoting Sustainable Materials Management (SMM) in order to limit waste generation in the first place. Using materials and resources more efficiently requires more integrated approaches towards the environmental impacts associated with their extraction, transportation and use, as well as waste disposal. In , the OECD is focusing on practical guidance for policy makers on how to implement SMM policies, based on material- and products specific case studies and with a focus on specific policy instruments. A report on extended producer responsibility will be released and an inventory of that at least 4% of annual GHG did you know emissions could be mitigated if waste management practices were improved, such as through more material recovery? waste prevention measures across the OECD countries will be developed. Key Publication Supplementary Guidance on Extended Producer Responsibility (2015) Material flows accounting The OECD has established a knowledge base on material flows and resource productivity, and has made advances in the development of common measures systems and indicators. Municipal Waste Generation, 2012 Kg/cap Source: OECD Key Environmental Indicators (2014)

28 OECD work on Environment 27 Key Publications Material Resources, Productivity and the Environment (2015) Sustainable Materials Management: Making Better Use of Resources (2012) Guidance Manual for the Control of Transboundary Movement of Recoverable Wastes (2009) Measuring Material Flows and Resource Productivity (2008)

29 28 Sectoral Policies: Transport, Agriculture Integrating environmental concerns into sector policies Transport Transport underpins economic and social development, allowing more efficient allocation of resources and increased mobility for people. Yet, there are challenges related to the environmental impacts of transport and globalisation can aggravate these challenges. A study published in 2014 indicates that the cost to society of air pollution caused by road transport in OECD countries could be in the order of USD 0.9 trillion per year. These costs are being increased by an ongoing shift from petrol to diesel vehicles. A working paper issued in 2014 discusses the rationale for the tax preference given to diesel vis-à-vis petrol in most OECD countries. there is a need to shift investment towards sustainable transport infrastructure. The OECD is applying the Green Investment Policy Framework to the transport sector (see also section on Financing Action on Climate Change). Key Publications The Cost of Air Pollution: Health Impacts of Road Transport (2014) The Diesel Differential: Differences in the Tax Treatment of Gasoline and Diesel for Road Use (2014) Personal Tax Treatment of Company Cars and Commuting Expenses: Estimating the Fiscal and Environmental Costs (2014) Environmental and Related Social Costs of the Tax Treatment of Company Cars and Commuting Expenses (2014) Two other working papers discuss the income tax treatment of the benefits to employees of having a company-owned car at their disposal and analyse their fiscal and social costs. did you know that ships are responsible for 2-4% of global man-made CO 2 emissions and 15% of other air pollutants? Transport is the second largest contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions. To avoid lock-in into carbonintensive and climate-vulnerable transport infrastructure,

30 OECD work on Environment 29 Agriculture The Environment Directorate contributes to work led by the Trade and Agriculture Directorate to strengthen policies to reduce the negative impacts of agriculture on the environment, to reinforce the positive impacts, and to develop and collect agrienvironmental indicators. (see also the section on Water). In , the OECD agri-environmental work will focus on climate change in agriculture, notably via the analysis of synergies and trade-offs between adaptation, mitigation and productivity, the implications of future water risk hotspots, land-use planning and ecosystem services, monitoring progress and assessing the role of the private sector towards green growth in agriculture. Key Publications Fostering Green Growth in Agriculture: The Role of Training, Advisory Services and Extension Initiatives (2015) Public Goods and Externalities: Agri-environmental Measures in Selected OECD Countries (2015) The Role of Public Policies in Promoting Adaptation (2015) Green Growth Indicators for Agriculture: A Preliminary Assessment (2014) Modelling Adaptation to Climate Change in Agriculture (2014) Environmental Co-benefits and Stacking in Environmental Markets (2014)

31 30 Safety of Chemicals, Pesticides, Biotechnology & Nanomaterials Protecting human health and the environment Chemical safety The chemicals industry is one of the world s major economic sectors. The products of the chemical industry are worth about EUR 3.8 trillion annually. The OECD Environment, Health and Safety (EHS) Programme aims to foster international co-operation to ensure the safety of chemicals and chemical products like pesticides, biocides, manufactured nanomaterials, and the products of modern biotechnology. It also aims to avoid barriers to trade at the same time. Mutual Acceptance of Data (MAD) The OECD Council Acts on the Mutual Acceptance of Data for the assessment of chemicals (MAD) are international agreements, which set the policies and provide the instruments that governments and industry need to test the safety of chemicals and chemical products. OECD countries must accept safety test data which has been developed in other countries using the OECD Test Guidelines and following the OECD Principles of Good Laboratory Practice. Non-tariff barriers to trade are minimised by harmonised policies and instruments, and duplicative testing is avoided, saving governments and industry time and money. Increasingly non-oecd economies are joining the MAD system, with Argentina, Brazil, India, Malaysia, South Africa and Singapore as full adherents; Thailand provisional adherents; and others expected to join soon. Sharing the regulatory burden for pesticides and industrial chemicals All OECD countries regulate chemicals, pesticides and products of modern biotechnology. By using the same methodologies for determining the safety of these products, it is possible for countries and industry to share the burden of testing and even evaluation in some cases. Countries work together in the OECD to share the work load required for registering pesticides and biocides and for notifying, registering or evaluating industrial chemicals. did you know that by working together through the OECD, governments and industry save over EUR 150 million annually?

32 OECD work on Environment 31 Safety of manufactured nanomaterials OECD countries have been addressing the human health and environmental safety implications of nanomaterials since In 2013, the OECD Council recommended that its Member countries apply existing international and national chemical regulatory framework to manage the risks associated with manufactured nanomaterials. Amongst other things, this Recommendation clears the way for nanomaterials to become subject to the Mutual Acceptance of Data. To this end, work is continuing to evaluate whether existing test methods for assessing the safety of chemicals are suitable for nanomaterials. A number of projects are underway to develop test guidelines appropriate for nanomaterials. New and more efficient tools for getting hazard information Much information on the hazards associated with specific chemicals is developed through tests in the laboratory. However, other promising approaches such as computer simulations called (quantitative) structure-activity relationships, known as (Q)SARs, have the potential to provide information on the hazards of chemicals. Such approaches can reduce the time and cost of testing, as well as the need for animal testing. Through OECD, member countries are looking at how such approaches can be used more routinely in a regulatory context. Co-operative testing of selected nanomaterials OECD and non-oecd governments have been working with industry, to pool expertise and funding to test the human health and environmental safety effects of 11 nanomaterials, which are currently in commerce. This testing work was completed recently and the data will be made publicly available. Work is also underway at the OECD to investigate how (Q)SAR approaches can be combined with results from toxicogenomics (the study of the response of a genome to hazardous chemicals) and from high-throughput screening in vitro assays (that can be applied rapidly to thousands of chemicals) in an integrated way to predict the effects of chemicals in animals and humans.

33 32 Safety of bio-tech products The majority of OECD countries and many others have a system of regulatory oversight in place to assess the safety of products of modern biotechnology. The most common products of this type are genetically engineered crop plants used in agriculture. The OECD works to ensure that the information used in safety assessment, and the methods used to collect that information, are shared amongst countries. Recent focus has been on major agricultural commodities such as soy bean, maize and cotton. Today, there is a greater focus on crops important in the tropics such as cassava and papaya. Preventing major chemical accidents The OECD Programme on Chemical Accidents addresses a subject that concerns everyone who uses or handles hazardous chemicals, works in a chemical plant, or lives near one. This programme helps public authorities, industry, labour and other interested parties to prevent chemical accidents and to respond appropriately if one occurs. The major output of the programme is the Guiding Principles for Chemical Accident Prevention, Preparedness and Response which are continuously updated. These principles provide advice to public authorities, industry, employees and their representatives as well as members of the public potentially affected in the event of an accident. These Guiding Principles are complemented by a series of safety performance indicators, which serve as a guide for key stakeholders including public authorities and industry, to determine if their implementation of the Guiding Principles has led to improved chemical safety. More recently, the OECD has published Corporate Governance for Process Safety: Guidance for senior leaders in high hazard industry to establish best practices for senior decision makers who have the authority to influence the direction and culture of their organisation. Key Publications OECD Guidelines for the Testing of Chemicals (series) Safety Assessment of Foods and Feeds Derived from Transgenic Crops (2015) Guiding Principles for Chemical Accident Prevention, Preparedness and Response (2015) Cutting Costs in Chemicals Management: How OECD Helps Governments and Industry (2010) Safety Assessment of Transgenic Organisms: Volumes 1-4 (2010) Good Laboratory Practice: OECD Principles and Guidance for Compliance Monitoring (2005)

34 OECD work on Environment 33 Environment in the Global Economy Making development and environment compatible and mutually supportive Environment and development Economic growth and development are intricately linked to the sound management of environmental resources. It is the poorest who rely most on environmental resources and are most affected by their degradation. Continuing collaboration between the Environment Policy Committee (EPOC) and the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) aims to support integration of environment and development issues. The main focus on climate change and on capacity development for environmental management. The Policy Guidance on Integrating Adaptation into Development Co-operation helps development co-operation agencies and developing countries to integrate adaptation within development activities and to climate-proof development. OECD analysis also examines the role of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) in ensuring that adaptation interventions are effective, efficient and equitable. Current work explores the methodological challenges for adaptation M&E and building blocks for measuring progress at the national level. Work for focuses on risk-transfer mechanisms and urban adaptation. Weak environmental governance and capacity constraints affecting sustainable management of natural resources in developing countries can undermine the achievement of key development and green growth objectives. The OECD report Greening Development: Enhancing Capacity for Environmental Management and Governance offers guidance on how to enhance the capacities of key stakeholders in both developing countries and in development co-operation agencies to integrate the environment into national planning and budgetary processes. This has recently been complemented with the development of an online training course.

35 34 Climate-related Development Finance in 2013 TOTAL 37 BN Bilateral principal BILATERAL Bilateral significant 13 bn 10 bn 26% ADAPTATION BOTH 13% GREEN Programme). These are done through robust policy analysis, diffusion and adaptation of good international practices, capacity development, policy dialogue at national and regional levels, and pilot application of policy tools. The EAP Task Force helps EECCA countries to make the best use of available finance and enhance dialogue with private sector and donors. It also contributes to the Environment for Europe process. MULTILATERAL 14 bn 61% MITIGATION Note: Aggregate figures reflect bilateral ODA and OOF flows from members of the OECD DAC and the UAE, identified as targeting climate change as either a principal or significant objective based on the Rio markers, and climate-related multilateral flows from seven MDBs and the GEF. Environment and development in EECCA The OECD Environment Directorate serves as the Secretariat of the Task Force for the Implementation of the Environmental Action Programme (EAP Task Force) in Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA). Projects identified for continue to be organised around two main themes: strengthening water management (implemented mainly under the EU Water Initiative framework); and market incentives and policy reforms for greening growth (principally in the context of the EaP Trade and environment The Environment Directorate works with the Trade and Agriculture Directorate to better understand interactions between environment policy and international trade. One focus has been trade in environmental goods and services, including a 2014 report indicating that stringent environmental regulations can lead to increased trade in environment goods. In 2012, a report on illegal trade in environmentally senstive goods addressed data and

36 OECD work on Environment 35 policy challenges related to illegal trade in wildlife, fish, waste, chemicals and timber. Recent work has focused on environmental labelling schemes, providing guidance to governments on how to respond to multiplication of labelling schemes. In , new work focuses on trade and climate change, looking at how physical impacts due to climate change may effect trade patterns and also examining interaction between the international negotiation processes in trade and in climate change. Work will also continue to track and evaluate the use of environmental provisions in regional free trade agreements. Co-operation with key emerging economies Key Partners (Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and South Africa) are invited to co-operate in all areas of OECD work on environment, in particular on green growth, climate change, water, biodiversity, environmental information, environmental indicators and policy instruments. Environmental Performance Reviews (EPR) of South Africa and Colombia were published in 2013 and 2014 respectively, and Brazil is currently being reviewed. A broader group of partner countries is invited to Global Forums on Environment on various environmental issues, providing a regular framework to substantiate the dialogue with non- OECD countries. Global Forums in will focus on issues including innovation, climate change and CIRCLE. Key Publications The Potential Benefits of Transboundary Co-operation between Georgia and Azerbaijan in the Kura River Basin (2015) Sustainable Business Models for Water Supply and Sanitation in Small Towns and Rural Areas in Kazakhstan (2015) Inventory of Energy Subsidies in the EU Eastern Partnership Countries (2015) Creating Market Incentives for Greener Products: Policy Manual for the EU Eastern Partnership Countries (2014) Greening Development: Enhancing Capacity for Environmental Management and Governance (2012) that in 2014 a group of 14 economies, did you know including many OECD members, have begun negotiations on a plurilateral agreement to liberalise trade in environmental goods? Environmental goods include renewable energy technologies, water and waste treatment products, air pollution control technologies, and environmental equipment.

37 36 Green Growth Aligning economic and environmental goals The OECD launched its Green Growth Strategy at the Ministerial Council Meeting in May It responded to a mandate given by 39 countries, when they signed the OECD Green Growth Declaration in 2009, comitting to strengthen their efforts to pursue green growth strategies as part of their responses to the crisis and beyond, acknowledging that green and growth can go hand in hand. The key message of the Green Growth Strategy is that the environment and the economy can no longer be considered in isolation, but that environmental considerations need to be an inherent part of future economic policymaking and development planning. Importantly, the Strategy argued that green growth cannot be a mere add-on to the mainstream reform agenda, but requires a reassessment of growth policies and priorities to ensure that their design and implementation better take into account environmental impacts. If implemented in structural reforms, green growth policies can unlock new growth opportunities by various channels. Well-designed green growth policies will ensure that market participants feel the social costs of using environmental assets, thus leading to a more efficient use of resources and natural assets. Better price signals for environmental externalities would also strengthen innovation and foster demand for new, environmentally more efficient goods and services, creating new markets and hence the potential for new job opportunities. Furthermore, stable green growth policies will enhance investor confidence through greater predictability in how governments deal with major environmental issues, and green fiscal reform can support fiscal consolidation and growth, as revenues from pricing externalities rise and harmful subsidies are phased out. Monitoring progress Green growth policies need to be founded on a good knowledge of environmental developments, the factors that affect growth and their linkages with well-being.

38 OECD work on Environment 37 To monitor progress and evaluate results, the OECD developed a measurement framework and a set of 26 indicators that capture the main features of green growth: the environmental and resource productivity of the economy, the natural asset base, the environmental dimension of quality of life, and the economic opportunities provided by a greener growth. To facilitate communication with the public and policy makers, a few headline indicators were selected. The work is part of the OECD s broader agenda on measuring progress and well-being. A selection of updated indicators, illustrating the progress made by OECD countries since the 1990s, is available in Green Growth Indicators Work is underway to improve the indicators, develop the statistical basis and implement environmental accounting in line with the SEEA. The focus is on headline indicators, particularly on natural resources and sub-soil assets, environmentally adjusted productivity growth, carbon and material productivity, land cover, and population exposure to air pollution. Countries like the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Korea, Mexico, Germany and the Netherlands, have applied the OECD measurement framework to assess their economy in terms of green growth. In a joint project with UNIDO, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Paraguay and Peru are applying the indicators to identify key challenges and improve the choice and design of policy instruments. The OECD also facilitates the exchange of experience and good practice on developing and applying a green growth measurement framework in the countries of Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA). This includes activities under the OECD Environmental Action Programme Task Force in EECCA (EAP Task Force), and the EaP GREEN project funded by the European Union. Ongoing projects in the region raise awareness about the benefits of using green growth indicators, identify good practices, and implement pilot projects. In March 2015, an EECCA regional workshop showcased how synergies among the fields of environment, green growth/economy and sustainable development could be exploited in the view of developing effective national approaches towards measuring green growth. Tailoring green growth strategies to individual countries and regions The OECD is supporting countries in their efforts to design and implement strategies for greener and more inclusive growth, through its core advice in country-specific and multilateral surveillance, including Economic Surveys, Environmental Performance Reviews, Investment Policy

39 38 Reviews, Reviews of Innovation Policy, the Green Cities programme and Going for Growth. Through these, the OECD is providing guidance tailored to the needs of individual countries. The OECD is working with other international organisations and partner countries to examine how green growth can be applied in the specific context of developing countries. The OECD report Putting Green Growth at the Heart of Development provides a platform for partner countries to indicate their interest in collaborating with the OECD to shape a green agenda that is feasible and relevant for them and addresses the aspirations of their citizens. The report Towards Green Growth in Southeast Asia was launched in November 2014 at the Asia Low Emissions Development Strategies Forum in Indonesia. Southeast Asia s booming economy offers tremendous growth potential, but also large and interlinked economic, social and environmental challenges. The region s current growth model is based in large part on natural resource exploitation, exacerbating these challenges. Carried out in consultation with officials and researchers from across the region, this report provides evidence that, with the right policies and institutions, Southeast Asia can pursue green growth and thus sustain the natural capital and environmental services, including a stable climate, on which prosperity depends.

40 OECD work on Environment 39 The Greening Economies in the European Union s Eastern Neighbourhood (EaP GREEN) programme is being implemented by the OECD in co-operation with UNECE, UNEP, and UNIDO to assist the European Union s Eastern Partnership (EaP) countries (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine) to move towards a green economy by decoupling economic growth from environmental degradation and resource depletion. The programme responds to commitments made by countries, the European Union and international partners in several international forums: the Warsaw Eastern Partnership Summit, the Seventh Environment for Europe Ministerial Conference, and the Rio+20 Summit. Green growth is also being integrated in OECD s sector- and issue-specific work to cover key areas such as energy (jointly with the IEA), food and agriculture, innovation, green investment, green business models, green jobs, biodiversity, water, rural development and others.

41 40 The Green Growth and Sustainable Development Forum at the OECD (GG-SD Forum) The GG-SD Forum is an initiative established by the OECD as a vehicle for facilitating dialogue among its Committee experts on cross-cutting green growth and sustainable development issues, to build on and complement the extensive work already underway in individual Committees and to maximise synergies across them. The GG-SD Forums operate as a series of annual conferences or workshops, focusing each year on a different issue of relevance to more than one OECD Committee. The 4th Green Growth and Sustainable Development Forum, on Enabling the Next Industrial Revolution: The Role of Systems Thinking and Innovation Policy in Promoting Green Growth will be held in December The theme of the 5th Green Growth and Sustainable Development Forum will cover Spatial Planning, Landuse and Urban Green Growth and will be held in The Green Growth Knowledge Platform (GGKP) The OECD has joined forces with the Global Green Growth Institute, UNEP and the World Bank to establish the GGKP. Launched in January 2012, the GGKP is an international knowledge-sharing platform that identifies and addresses major knowledge gaps in green growth/green economy theory and practice. It aims to provide practitioners and policymakers with better tools to foster economic growth and implement sustainable development. The GGKP held its 3rd Annual Conference in January 2015 on the theme Fiscal Policies and the Green Economies Transition: Generating Knowledge-Creating Impact.

42 OECD work on Environment 41 Key Publications Towards Green Growth? Tracking Progress (2015) Green Growth Indicators 2014 (2014) Tools for Delivering Green Growth (PDF) (2011) Towards Green Growth: A Summary for Policy Makers (PDF) (2011) Towards Green Growth: free version (2011) Towards Green Growth Monitoring Progress: OECD Indicators (2011) Green growth studies and papers: The Green Growth Studies series aims to provide in-depth reviews of the green growth issues faced by different sectors. The OECD Green Growth Papers complement the OECD Green Growth Studies series, and aim to stimulate discussion and analysis on specific topics and obtain feedback from interested audiences.

43 42 The Committee Structures The Environment Policy Committee (EPOC) implements the OECD s Environment Programme. Established in 1971, EPOC consists of delegates from capitals and meets 1-2 times per year. The Committee holds meetings at the Ministerial level approximately every four years. The next meeting is envisaged for EPOC oversees work on: country reviews, indicators and outlooks, climate change, natural resource management, policy tools and evaluation, environment and development, and resource efficiency and waste, supported by EPOC s seven Working Parties. EPOC also formally co-operates with other OECD Committees, including through Joint Working Parties on Trade and Environment and on Agriculture and Environment, as well as Joint Meetings of Experts on Tax and Environment and Joint Task Teams on environment and development issues. The committee also works with other OECD committees to ensure consistency of the messages as they pertain to environment as well as ensuring horizontal links with other work in the OECD. The Chemicals Committee, like EPOC, reports directly to the OECD Council. EPOC s Working Party on Chemicals, Pesticides and Biotechnology and the Chemicals Committee together form the Joint Meeting which oversees the Environment, Health and Safety (EHS) Programme. EPOC is a major partner in two horizontal programmes at the OECD, one on Green Growth and the other on Water. The OECD Environment Directorate and the International Energy Agency (IEA) jointly serve as the Secretariat for the Climate Change Expert Group and undertakes studies of issues related to the negotiation and implementation of international agreements on climate change. The OECD Environment Directorate also functions as the Secretariat for the Task Force for the Implementation of the Environmental Action Programme in Central and Eastern Europe (EAP Task Force). The Task Force provides a forum for dialogue and co-operation for countries in Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA). The Environment Programme is carried out in co-operation with international and regional organisations, e.g. the World Bank, UNEP, WTO, UNECE and Secretariats for UNFCCC, CBD and the Basel Convention. Key research institutes are also important partners, as is civil society represented through business, labour and NGOs. EPOC is actively engaging with key emerging economies through Global Forums on Environment.

44 OECD work on Environment 43 OECD Council Environment Policy Committee Working Party on Biodiversity, Water and Ecosystems Working Party on Climate, Investment and Development EPOC Organigramme Working Group of National Co-ordinators of the Test Guidelines Programme Working Group on Good Laboratory Practice Working Party on Manufactured Nanomaterials Task Force on Exposure Assessment Task Force on Hazard Assessment Joint Meeting Chemicals Committee Other OECD substantive committees Working Party on Environmental Information Working Party on Environmental Performance Working Party on Integrating Environmental and Economic Policies Working Party on Resource Productivity and Waste Working Party on Chemicals, Pesticides and Biotechnology Joint Working Party on Trade and Environment Joint Working Party on Agriculture and Environment Joint Meetings of Tax and Environment Experts Working Group on Good Laboratory Practice Working Group on Pesticides Working Group on Chemical Accidents Working Group on National Co ordinators of Test Guidelines Programme Working Group on the Harmonisation of Regulatory Oversight in Biotechnology Task Force for the Safety of Novel Foods and Feeds Task Force on Biocides Task Force on the Pollutant Release and Transfer Registers Ad Hoc Climate Change Expert Group (CCXG) with IEA Task Force for the Implementation of the Environmental Action Programme in Central and Eastern Europe (EAP)

45 44 Environment Directorate (ENV) The Environment Directorate is a multicultural team, encompassing some 120 international civil servants: economists, policy analysts, statisticians and administrative staff. We are an extension to national governments analytical capacity, providing policy-relevant analysis and policy recommendations based on reliable environmental data, outlooks and cross-country experiences. We help countries to design environmental policies that are both economically efficient and effective at achieving their environmental objectives. We also provide a forum for governments and representatives from business and civil society for constructive dialogue on how best to develop and implement environmental policies across OECD and other countries. The ENV management team members are: Director s Office Simon Upton Director Anthony Cox Deputy Director simon.upton@oecd.org Tel.: anthony.cox@oecd.org Tel.:

46 OECD work on Environment 45 Climate Change, Biodiversity and Water Division Simon Buckle Head of Division Environment and Economy Integration Division Shardul Agrawala Head of Division Tel.: shardul.agrawala@oecd.org Tel.: Environment, Health and Safety Division Environmental Performance and Information Division Bob Diderich Head of Division Nathalie Girouard Head of Division bob.diderich@oecd.org Tel.: nathalie.girouard@oecd.org Tel.: Green Growth and Global Relations Division Central Management and Committee Branch Kumi Kitamori Head of Division Amy Plantin Head of Unit and Executive Secretary to EPOC kumi.kitamori@oecd.org Tel.: amy.plantin@oecd.org Tel.:

47 46 Recent Flagship Publications Mapping Channels to Mobilise Institutional Investment in Sustainable Energy The Cost of Air Pollution: Health Impacts of Road Transport Effective Carbon Prices Scaling-up Finance Mechanisms for Biodiversity Environmental Performance Reviews

48 OECD work on Environment 47 Forthcoming Flagship Publications Aligning Policies for the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy (2015) Overcoming Barriers to International Investment in Clean Energy (2015) Economic Consequences of Climate Change (2015) Water and Cities: Ensuring Sustainable Futures (2015) Economic Policy Reforms 2015: Going for Growth (2015) Cost-Benefit Analyses and the Environment (2016) Economics of Adaptation: Moving from Theory to Practice (2015) Environment at a Glance (2015) OECD Environmental Performance Reviews: Brazil, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain (2015); Chile and France (2016) Environment Working Papers: This series is designed to make available to a wider readership selected studies on environmental issues prepared for use within the OECD.

49 48 Selected Databases OECD/EEA Instruments Database Information on environmentally-related taxes, fees and charges, tradable permits systems, deposit-refund systems, environmentally motivated subsidies and voluntary approaches. Value of Statistical Life (VSL) Data used in a meta-analysis of value of statistical life estimates from stated preferences surveys in environment, health and traffic risk contexts. Transboundary Movement of Wastes destined for Recovery Operations Country-specific requirements for the application of the OECD Decision on Transboundary Movements of Waste Destined for Recovery Operations. echemportal A Global Portal for information on properties of chemical substances. Biotech Products Database Information and unique identifiers on products derived from using modern biotechnology which have been approved for commercial application. Get free ENV reports and statistics Visit for a selection of free reports and data.

50 OECD work on Environment 49

oecd WorK on EnvironmEnt

oecd WorK on EnvironmEnt OECD WORK ON Environment 2017-18 OECD WORK ON environment 12 The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 13 Preface by Angel Gurría, OECD Secretary-General 14 Peer Reviews, Indicators and

More information

OECD experience with strenghthening fiscal capacities for subnational public investment

OECD experience with strenghthening fiscal capacities for subnational public investment Leopolis Hall Prospekt Svobody, L viv, Ukraine 22 June 2017 OECD experience with strenghthening fiscal capacities for subnational public investment Isabelle CHATRY Project manager, subnational finances

More information

The sustainable management of water in agriculture an OECD perspective. Wilfrid Legg Trade and Agriculture Directorate

The sustainable management of water in agriculture an OECD perspective. Wilfrid Legg Trade and Agriculture Directorate The sustainable management of water in agriculture an OECD perspective Wilfrid Legg Trade and Agriculture Directorate Australian National University, Canberra, 25 August 2009 The OECD The Organisation

More information

OECD INTER-COUNTRY INPUT-OUTPUT DATA AND EMBODIED CO2 EMISSIONS

OECD INTER-COUNTRY INPUT-OUTPUT DATA AND EMBODIED CO2 EMISSIONS OECD INTER-COUNTRY INPUT-OUTPUT DATA AND EMBODIED CO2 EMISSIONS Kirsten Wiebe & Norihiko Yamano OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation COP21 Le Bourget, France November 30, 2015 OECD Inter-country

More information

29/07/2015. Rintaro Tamaki Deputy Secretary-General, OECD. ISAP July Agenda CONTEXT KEY MESSAGES CONCLUSIONS AND NEXT STEPS

29/07/2015. Rintaro Tamaki Deputy Secretary-General, OECD. ISAP July Agenda CONTEXT KEY MESSAGES CONCLUSIONS AND NEXT STEPS Rintaro Tamaki Deputy Secretary-General, OECD ISAP 2015 29 July 2015 Agenda CONTEXT KEY MESSAGES CONCLUSIONS AND NEXT STEPS 2 1 OECD Ministerial Council Meeting 2014 At their Ministerial Council Meeting,

More information

THE DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE COMMITTEE: ENABLING EFFECTIVE DEVELOPMENT

THE DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE COMMITTEE: ENABLING EFFECTIVE DEVELOPMENT THE DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE COMMITTEE: ENABLING EFFECTIVE DEVELOPMENT BIODIVERSITY- RELATED OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE 2015 The adoption of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 under the Convention

More information

Getting Skills Right Assessing and anticipating changing skills needs

Getting Skills Right Assessing and anticipating changing skills needs Getting Skills Right Assessing and anticipating changing skills needs ETF Regional Workshop on identification and matching of skills needs in the South Eastern European countries and Turkey FABIO MANCA

More information

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY. In support of the G8 Plan of Action TOWARD A CLEAN, CLEVER & COMPETITIVE ENERGY FUTURE

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY. In support of the G8 Plan of Action TOWARD A CLEAN, CLEVER & COMPETITIVE ENERGY FUTURE INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY In support of the G8 Plan of Action TOWARD A CLEAN, CLEVER & COMPETITIVE ENERGY FUTURE 2007 REPORT TO THE G8 SUMMIT in Heiligendamm, Germany The International Energy Agency,

More information

Productivity Key measurement challenges

Productivity Key measurement challenges Productivity Key measurement challenges Anita Wölfl, OECD Statistics Directorate OECD Workshop on Productivity, Paris, 5-6 November 2012 Measuring Productivity why and how? Why - Productivity is again

More information

Energy & Climate Change ENYGF 2015

Energy & Climate Change ENYGF 2015 Energy & Climate Change ENYGF 2015 Ellina Levina Environment & Climate Change Unit Sustainable Energy Policy and Technology, IEA 22 June 2015 29 Member Countries: Australia, Japan, Korea, New Zealand,

More information

OECD Survey on Planning and Co-ordinating the Implementation of the SDGs: First results and key issues

OECD Survey on Planning and Co-ordinating the Implementation of the SDGs: First results and key issues OECD Network of Senior Officials from Centres of Government OECD Survey on Planning and Co-ordinating the Implementation of the SDGs: Shutterstock.com First results and key issues Background 1 The role

More information

Decision taken from September 2010 Four focus areas: megacities, informal sector, global recycling markets & international aid tools Members: Antonis

Decision taken from September 2010 Four focus areas: megacities, informal sector, global recycling markets & international aid tools Members: Antonis ISWA s Task Force on Globalization & Waste Management Decision taken from September 2010 Four focus areas: megacities, informal sector, global recycling markets & international aid tools Members: Antonis

More information

Measuring Progress towards Green Growth through indicators. OECD work. UNCEEA Sixth meeting New York, June 2011

Measuring Progress towards Green Growth through indicators. OECD work. UNCEEA Sixth meeting New York, June 2011 Measuring Progress towards Green Growth through indicators OECD work UNCEEA Sixth meeting New York, 15-17 June 2011 Measuring progress towards Green growth Monitoring progress through indicators at the

More information

OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction

OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction Simon Upton Environment Director, OECD New York, 21 March 2012 2 Energy efficiency Linking economy and environment Fuel prices Yield efficiency

More information

Director OECD Environment Directorate

Director OECD Environment Directorate For more information, see www.oecd.org/greengrowth Launch of the OECD Environmental Performance Review of Slovenia, Ljubljana, 6 June 2012 Simon Upton Director OECD Environment Directorate GDP per capita

More information

Iceland and Power Security: An attraction for energy intensive industries Rikardur Rikardsson, Director of Sales and Business Development 30 th

Iceland and Power Security: An attraction for energy intensive industries Rikardur Rikardsson, Director of Sales and Business Development 30 th Iceland and Power Security: An attraction for energy intensive industries Rikardur Rikardsson, Director of Sales and Business Development 30 th International Ferro Alloys Conference November 10, 2014 The

More information

ANNEX 4 THE OUTLOOK TO 2020 AND BEYOND TO 2050

ANNEX 4 THE OUTLOOK TO 2020 AND BEYOND TO 2050 ANNEX 4 THE OUTLOOK TO 2020 AND BEYOND TO 2050 1) The OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050 1 By 2050, the Earth s population is expected to increase from 7 billion to over 9 billion. Coupled with expected

More information

Working together to meet global energy challenges

Working together to meet global energy challenges Working together to meet global energy challenges Staff on loan From around the world From IEA and OECD member countries: Australia Austria Belgium Canada Chile Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France

More information

ASSESSING GOOD PRACTICES IN POLICIES AND MEASURES TO MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE. Elena Petkova

ASSESSING GOOD PRACTICES IN POLICIES AND MEASURES TO MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE. Elena Petkova Workshop on Best Practices in Policies and Measures, 8-10 October 2001, Copenhagen ASSESSING GOOD PRACTICES IN POLICIES AND MEASURES TO MITIGATE CLIMATE CHANGE IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE Elena Petkova

More information

Planning, implementation, follow-up and review of the Sustainable Development Goals

Planning, implementation, follow-up and review of the Sustainable Development Goals Planning, implementation, follow-up and review of the Sustainable Development Goals Regional survey by UNECE and the Regional UN Development Group for Europe and Central Asia Geneva and New York, 2 December

More information

Energy Subsidies, Economic Growth, and CO 2 emissions

Energy Subsidies, Economic Growth, and CO 2 emissions Energy Subsidies, Economic Growth, and CO 2 emissions Gabriela Mundaca The World Bank October 18, 2018 Presentation based on 2 papers 1. Energy Subsidies, Public Investment and Endogenous Growth. (2017).

More information

TRUST -- PUBLIC SECTOR INTEGRITY AND LOBBYING

TRUST -- PUBLIC SECTOR INTEGRITY AND LOBBYING TRUST -- PUBLIC SECTOR INTEGRITY AND LOBBYING Ministry of Finance Helsinki, 16 May 2018 Janos Bertok Head of Public Sector Integrity Division OECD Overview of presentation 1. Integrity & public trust what

More information

5-6 March 2013, Prague, the Czech Republic

5-6 March 2013, Prague, the Czech Republic MONITORING PROGRESS TOWARDS GREEN GROWTH IN THE COUNTRIES OF EASTERN PARTNERSHIP AND CENTRAL ASIA: PROJECT CONCEPT AND OUTLINE FOR A POLICY REFORM HANDBOOK 5-6 March 2013, Prague, the Czech Republic Unclassified

More information

THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK IN ICELAND. Douglas Sutherland, Economics Department OECD 13 January 2016, Reykjavik

THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK IN ICELAND. Douglas Sutherland, Economics Department OECD 13 January 2016, Reykjavik THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK IN ICELAND Douglas Sutherland, Economics Department OECD 13 January 2016, Reykjavik Background from 2015 OECD Economic Survey of Iceland Policy and regulatory settings drawn from

More information

Introduction: Context and Methodology

Introduction: Context and Methodology ISBN 978-92-64-04048-9 OECD Environmental Outlook to 2030 OECD 2008 Introduction: Context and Methodology Purpose of the report The purpose of the OECD Environmental Outlook is to help government policy-makers

More information

Applying Strategic Environmental Assessment to Development Co-operation

Applying Strategic Environmental Assessment to Development Co-operation Applying Strategic Environmental Assessment to Development Co-operation Introduction There is increasing recognition of the value and importance of Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) in development

More information

l A working group on water quality monitoring and assessment l A comprehensive assessment of selected economic

l A working group on water quality monitoring and assessment l A comprehensive assessment of selected economic .. Armenia NPD launched 6 Water Resources Management Agency (Ministry of Nature Protection) State Committee of Water Systems (Ministry of Territorial Administration) European Union, Government of Finland,

More information

ENVIRONMENTAL OUTLOOK TO 2050: The consequences of Inaction

ENVIRONMENTAL OUTLOOK TO 2050: The consequences of Inaction Km3 ENVIRONMENTAL OUTLOOK TO 25: The consequences of Inaction Key Findings on Water Around the world, cities, farmers, industries, energy suppliers, and ecosystems are increasingly competing for their

More information

CONNECTING TO COMPETE The 2014 Logistics Performance Index

CONNECTING TO COMPETE The 2014 Logistics Performance Index CONNECTING TO COMPETE The 2014 Logistics Performance Index Transport Business Summit 2014 Brussels Dr. Jean-François Arvis Senior Economist, The World Bank Prof. Lauri Ojala University of Turku, Finland

More information

GLOBAL COALITION FOR GOOD WATER GOVERNANCE

GLOBAL COALITION FOR GOOD WATER GOVERNANCE GLOBAL COALITION FOR GOOD WATER GOVERNANCE Launched at the 2016 World Water Week in Stockholm, Sweden The OECD Principles on Water Governance On 4 June 2015, the OECD Principles on Water Governance were

More information

Well-being in regions: Building more coherent policies for a better growth model

Well-being in regions: Building more coherent policies for a better growth model Liv i væksten Well-being in regions: Building more coherent policies for a better growth model Joaquim Oliveira Martins Head of the OECD Regional Development Policy Division Monica Brezzi Head of the Regional

More information

Monitoring Land cover change

Monitoring Land cover change Monitoring Land cover change Why land cover? Measuring land cover change helps monitor pressures on ecosystems and biodiversity. Loss of biodiversity and pressures on ecosystem services are among the most

More information

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. Annex to the

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. Annex to the COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Brussels, 22.3.2007 SEC(2007) 363 COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Annex to the COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL 'Towards

More information

T h e E c o n o m i c s o f E c o s y s t e m s & B i o d i v e r s i t y

T h e E c o n o m i c s o f E c o s y s t e m s & B i o d i v e r s i t y T h e E c o n o m i c s o f E c o s y s t e m s & B i o d i v e r s i t y THE TEEB REPORTS All TEEB reports are available online at www.teebweb.org TEEB (2008) The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity:

More information

Water and Agriculture: Drawing on the Policy Experience across OECD Countries towards the Sustainable Management of Water in New Zealand

Water and Agriculture: Drawing on the Policy Experience across OECD Countries towards the Sustainable Management of Water in New Zealand Water and Agriculture: Drawing on the Policy Experience across OECD Countries towards the Sustainable Management of Water in New Zealand Kevin Parris Trade and Agriculture Directorate OECD, Paris Paper

More information

SOUTHEA ST ASIA ENERGY OUTLOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. World Energy Outlook Special Report

SOUTHEA ST ASIA ENERGY OUTLOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. World Energy Outlook Special Report SOUTHEA ST ASIA ENERGY OUTLOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY World Energy Outlook Special Report INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY The International Energy Agency (IEA), an autonomous agency, was established in November

More information

MEANS TO AN END: the OECD Approach for Effective Implementation of Public Procurement Systems Getting really strategic

MEANS TO AN END: the OECD Approach for Effective Implementation of Public Procurement Systems Getting really strategic MEANS TO AN END: the OECD Approach for Effective Implementation of Public Procurement Systems Getting really strategic Paulo Magina Head of the Public Procurement Unit, GOV, OECD 11TH PUBLIC PROCUREMENT

More information

How2Guide for Bioenergy. Ingrid Barnsley, Anselm Eisentraut Southeast Asia regional workshop July 2014, Bangkok, Thailand

How2Guide for Bioenergy. Ingrid Barnsley, Anselm Eisentraut Southeast Asia regional workshop July 2014, Bangkok, Thailand How2Guide for Bioenergy Ingrid Barnsley, Anselm Eisentraut Southeast Asia regional workshop 23-24 July 2014, Bangkok, Thailand OECD/IEA 2012 International Energy Agency Founded in 1974 Formed in wake of

More information

Public Procurement for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth. Enabling reform through evidence and peer reviews

Public Procurement for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth. Enabling reform through evidence and peer reviews Public Procurement for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth Enabling reform through evidence and peer reviews The OECD supports governments in reforming their public procurement systems to ensure long-term

More information

Dr Cathy Maguire European Environment Agency THE EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENT STATE AND OUTLOOK 2015

Dr Cathy Maguire European Environment Agency THE EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENT STATE AND OUTLOOK 2015 Dr Cathy Maguire European Environment Agency cathy.maguire@eea.europa.eu THE ENVIRONMENT STATE AND OUTLOOK 2015 The EEA: a network organisation with a direct link to policy The European Environment Agency

More information

The OECD The Nuclear Energy Agency

The OECD The Nuclear Energy Agency The OECD The Nuclear Energy Agency Janice Dunn Lee OECD/NEA Deputy Director-General WNU Summer Institute July 14, 2011 1 Overview The OECD/NEA The Work of the NEA The NEA and Other International Organisations

More information

What can be Gained From International Analyses? An Economic Perspective

What can be Gained From International Analyses? An Economic Perspective What can be Gained From International Analyses? An Economic Perspective Guido Schwerdt (University of Konstanz and Ifo Institut) Kickoff of the European Training Network OCCAM TU Dortmund University 22

More information

Measuring Progress: Green Growth Indicators

Measuring Progress: Green Growth Indicators Measuring Progress: Green Growth Indicators Žiga Žarnić OECD, Green Growth Unit Global Green Growth Summit 2013 Incheon, Republic of Korea, 11 June 2013 1 OECD experience DELIVERING ON GREEN GROWTH 2 Getting

More information

A decade of oil demand

A decade of oil demand A decade of oil demand World oil demand Eni has recently published the thirteenth edition of the 2014 World Oil and Gas Review, the annual statistical review on the world oil and gas market and the refining

More information

12.C Agricultural Production Targeting

12.C Agricultural Production Targeting 12.C Agricultural Production Targeting Robert A. McDougall 12.C.1 Background Agricultural production targeting is a procedure applied to certain I-O tables before the main data construction phase. Except

More information

Rethinking E-Government Services

Rethinking E-Government Services Rethinking E-Government Services Session 3: Serving Citizens Becoming User-focused in the Provision of E-Government Services OECD-India meeting 4 December 2009 New Delhi, India Yih-Jeou Wang Head of Unit

More information

Resolution of the Council on Implementation of the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM)

Resolution of the Council on Implementation of the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM) Resolution of the Council on Implementation of the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM) Meeting of the Environment Policy Committee (EPOC) at Ministerial Level Environment and

More information

Energy Innovation Scoreboard A Pilot Framework with a Focus on Renewables

Energy Innovation Scoreboard A Pilot Framework with a Focus on Renewables Energy Innovation Scoreboard A Pilot Framework with a Focus on Renewables Claudia Kettner, Angela Köppl IEA Workshop on "Modelling and Analyses in R&D Priority-Setting and Innovation" IEA, 24 April 2014

More information

International management system: ISO on environmental management

International management system: ISO on environmental management International management system: ISO 14000 on environmental management Introduction In response to the growing interest from businesses in environmental standards, the International Standardization Institute,

More information

Agricultural Production Technology

Agricultural Production Technology PUTTING IN PLACE THE CONDITIONS TO SET UP A CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEME FOR AGRIBUSINESS SMEs IN UKRAINE Agricultural Production Technology Capacity Building Seminar 1-2 February 2016 Ministry of Agrarian

More information

Global Energy Production & Use 101

Global Energy Production & Use 101 Global Energy Production & Use 101 Jean-Sébastien Rioux The School of Public Policy SPP-HEI Summer School on the Geopolitics of Energy & Natural Resources Calgary, AB May 15-20, 2017 Presentation highlights

More information

Compact city policies: a comparative assessment

Compact city policies: a comparative assessment Compact city policies: a comparative assessment TADASHI MATSUMOTO 松本忠 Organisation for Economic Corporation and Development (OECD) March 12, 2012 US Department of Housing and Urban Development; Washington,

More information

Compact city policies: a comparative assessment

Compact city policies: a comparative assessment Compact city policies: a comparative assessment TADASHI MATSUMOTO 松本忠 Organisation for Economic Corporation and Development (OECD) Presentation at the World Bank seminar, March 13 th, 2012, Washington

More information

U.S. Climate Change Policy

U.S. Climate Change Policy U.S. Climate Change Policy Dr. Harlan Watson Senior Climate Negotiator and Special Representative U.S. Department of State Joint Meeting of Global Environment Subcommittee and Expert Committee to Study

More information

CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR FOOD AND AGRICULTURE IN THE 21 ST CENTURY

CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR FOOD AND AGRICULTURE IN THE 21 ST CENTURY CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR FOOD AND AGRICULTURE IN THE 21 ST CENTURY Catherine Moreddu Trade and Agriculture Directorate Agricultural Higher Education in the 21st Century, Zaragoza, Spain, 15-17

More information

Environmental Best Practices, It Begins with Us: Business, Local Governments and International Community Should Work Together

Environmental Best Practices, It Begins with Us: Business, Local Governments and International Community Should Work Together Environmental Best Practices, It Begins with Us: Business, Local Governments and International Community Should Work Together Jung Wan Lee, PhD Boston University, United States Objectives of the Paper

More information

Enabling international research collaboration:

Enabling international research collaboration: Enabling international research collaboration: New Zealand s experience with the Global Research Alliance (GRA) www.mpi.govt.nz Outline of presentation Background on the GRA What s worked well and why?

More information

ENERGY PRIORITIES FOR EUROPE

ENERGY PRIORITIES FOR EUROPE ENERGY PRIORITIES FOR EUROPE Presentation of J.M. Barroso, President of the European Commission, to the European Council of 4 February 2011 Contents 1 I. Why energy policy matters II. Why we need to act

More information

Energy and CO 2 emissions in the OECD

Energy and CO 2 emissions in the OECD Energy and CO 2 emissions in the OECD With detailed supply and demand data up to 216 1 1. Data based on the 218 preliminary editions of the IEA World energy balances, and the IEA CO 2 Emissions from fuel

More information

Environmental Performance Review of South Africa

Environmental Performance Review of South Africa Review of South Africa Simon Upton Director, Environment 3 December 213 GDP per capita USD/capita (25 prices and PPP) 16, 14, 12, 1, 8, 6, Chile Turkey Mexico Brazil China South Africa 4, 2, Unemployment

More information

Economic Concepts. Economic Concepts and Applications to Climate Change

Economic Concepts. Economic Concepts and Applications to Climate Change Economic Concepts and Applications to Climate Change Economic Concepts When markets work and when they don t t work Policy Interventions to correct market failures Recent research in climate change 1 Part

More information

THE ROLE OF INTANGIBLE, KNOWLEDGE-BASED CAPITAL IN ECONOMIC GROWTH

THE ROLE OF INTANGIBLE, KNOWLEDGE-BASED CAPITAL IN ECONOMIC GROWTH THE ROLE OF INTANGIBLE, KNOWLEDGE-BASED CAPITAL IN ECONOMIC GROWTH Alistair Nolan OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Industry Washington DC, January 2014 What is knowledge-based capital (KBC)?

More information

INTERCONNECTED ECONOMIES: BENEFITTING FROM GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS THE CZECH REPUBLIC. Koen De Backer

INTERCONNECTED ECONOMIES: BENEFITTING FROM GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS THE CZECH REPUBLIC. Koen De Backer INTERCONNECTED ECONOMIES: BENEFITTING FROM GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS THE CZECH REPUBLIC Koen De Backer Conference of Economic Counselors, Prague, 25 June 2013 Outline GVCs as a new phase in economic globalisation

More information

Expert meeting on Building an open and innovative government for better policies and service delivery. Paris, 8-9 June 2010

Expert meeting on Building an open and innovative government for better policies and service delivery. Paris, 8-9 June 2010 Expert meeting on Building an open and innovative government for better policies and service delivery Paris, 8-9 June 2010 Background document for session 1 (8 June, 16h 17h) OECD Guiding Principles for

More information

Policy Performance and Governance Capacities in the OECD

Policy Performance and Governance Capacities in the OECD 14.11.2012 Policy Performance and Governance Capacities in the OECD SGI 2011 design Status Index 3 Sustainable policy outcomes in a democratic context Total: 100 qualitative and quantitative indicators

More information

WATER PRICING Seizing a Public Policy Dilemma by the Horns

WATER PRICING Seizing a Public Policy Dilemma by the Horns Water, Water Use & Water Pricing Around the World Introduction When discussing Canada s water supply and usage patterns, it is important to place Canada in a global context. Does Canada use more or less

More information

Energy Efficiency Indicators: The Electric Power Sector

Energy Efficiency Indicators: The Electric Power Sector Energy Efficiency Indicators: 5 Sectors, 5 Challenges Mexico City, Mexico 14-15 March 2011 Energy Efficiency Indicators: The Electric Power Sector Robert Schnapp Head, Coal, Renewables, Electric and Heat

More information

ISSUE PAPER Putting green growth at the heart of development

ISSUE PAPER Putting green growth at the heart of development 3-4 April, OECD Conference Centre, Paris DAC SENIOR LEVEL MEETING 2013 ISSUE PAPER Putting green growth at the heart of development The OECD Development Assistance Committee: Enabling effective development

More information

G20 Framework for Analysing Policies to Improve Agricultural Productivity Growth, Sustainably: Stocktaking

G20 Framework for Analysing Policies to Improve Agricultural Productivity Growth, Sustainably: Stocktaking 1 Background G20 Framework for Analysing Policies to Improve Agricultural Productivity Growth, Sustainably: Stocktaking 2012-18 1. The food and agriculture sector is expected to provide healthy, safe and

More information

Credit Guarantee Schemes: Regulation and Management

Credit Guarantee Schemes: Regulation and Management PUTTING IN PLACE THE CONDITIONS TO SET UP A CREDIT GUARANTEE SCHEME FOR AGRIBUSINESS SMEs IN UKRAINE Credit Guarantee Schemes: Regulation and Management Capacity Building Seminars 22-24 February 2016 Ministry

More information

Anticipating and Responding to Changing Skill Needs

Anticipating and Responding to Changing Skill Needs OECD-G20-ILO-KMOFA Knowledge Sharing Workshop on Human Resource Development, Skills and Labour Mobility for Inclusive Labour Markets and Growth Paris, 7-8 October 2015 Anticipating and Responding to Changing

More information

Actions and support before 2020: where are we? Paving the way for progress under the Paris Agreement

Actions and support before 2020: where are we? Paving the way for progress under the Paris Agreement Actions and support before 2020: where are we? Paving the way for progress under the Paris Agreement Key messages 2020 Developed countries are progressing towards their 2020 targets but gaps remain Increasing

More information

ITAM Mexico City, 27 October 2016

ITAM Mexico City, 27 October 2016 ITAM Mexico City, 27 October 2016 Founded in 1974 Formed in wake of 1973 oil embargo with mission to promote member country energy security -- autonomous agency of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation

More information

Funding Climate Action - Thursday, 4 December

Funding Climate Action - Thursday, 4 December GDF SUEZ Energy Latin America Funding Climate Action - Thursday, 4 December GDF SUEZ ENERGY LATIN AMERICA Philipp Hauser VP Carbon Markets philipp.hauser@gdfsuezla.com Tel: +552139745443 GDF SUEZ supports

More information

IMPROVING INNOVATION FOR A MORE PRODUCTIVE AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD AND AGRICULTURE SYSTEM: POLICY INSIGHTS FROM COUNTRY REVIEWS

IMPROVING INNOVATION FOR A MORE PRODUCTIVE AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD AND AGRICULTURE SYSTEM: POLICY INSIGHTS FROM COUNTRY REVIEWS IMPROVING INNOVATION FOR A MORE PRODUCTIVE AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD AND AGRICULTURE SYSTEM: POLICY INSIGHTS FROM COUNTRY REVIEWS Catherine Moreddu Trade and Agriculture Directorate SCAR Conference 2017 Research

More information

OECD ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME

OECD ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME OECD ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME OECD Environment Directorate Paris, France THE OECD ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME Contents What Does the OECD Do? 3 An Evolving Context for Environmental Policy 5 How Do We Work? 9 What

More information

Institutional reforms of AKS in New Zealand and International Networks in AKS

Institutional reforms of AKS in New Zealand and International Networks in AKS Institutional reforms of AKS in New Zealand and International Networks in AKS Karla Falloon Counsellor (Science and Technology) New Zealand Mission to the European Union karla.falloon@msi.govt.nz www.msi.govt.nz

More information

Highlights. Figure 1. World Marketed Energy Consumption by Region,

Highlights. Figure 1. World Marketed Energy Consumption by Region, Highlights World energy consumption is projected to increase by 71 percent from 3 to 23. Fossil fuels continue to supply much of the energy used worldwide, and oil remains the dominant energy source. In

More information

HEALTH WEALTH CAREER MERCER LIFE SCIENCES REMUNERATION SURVEY

HEALTH WEALTH CAREER MERCER LIFE SCIENCES REMUNERATION SURVEY HEALTH WEALTH CAREER MERCER LIFE SCIENCES REMUNERATION SURVEY MAKE SMART COMPENSATION DECISIONS BY JOINING THE 2016 MERCER TOTAL REMUNERATION SURVEY FOR THE LIFE SCIENCES SECTOR THE LIFE SCIENCES REMUNERATION

More information

2 ENERGY TECHNOLOGY RD&D BUDGETS: OVERVIEW (2017 edition) Released in October 2017. The IEA energy RD&D data collection and the analysis presented in this paper were performed by Remi Gigoux under the

More information

THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION

THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION Global Assessment and Some Implications for the Arctic Shardul Agrawala Head, Environment and Economy Integration Division OECD Environment Directorate

More information

Convention on Long-range Trans- boundary Air Pollution

Convention on Long-range Trans- boundary Air Pollution Convention on Long-range Trans- boundary Air Pollution Reactive Nitrogen (TFRN) 1 st meeting 21 23 May 2008, Wageningen, the Netherlands Matti Johansson secretary to the Working Group on Effects, s on

More information

Strong focus on market and policy analysis

Strong focus on market and policy analysis OECD/IEA - 2015 Founded in 1974 OECD agency 29 member countries 1 new applicant - Mexico 3 associate countries: China, Indonesia, Thailand 240 staff in Paris secretariat The European Commission also participates

More information

Assessing country procurement systems and supporting good practice: The contribution of the 2015 OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement

Assessing country procurement systems and supporting good practice: The contribution of the 2015 OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement Assessing country procurement systems and supporting good practice: The contribution of the 2015 OECD Recommendation on Public Procurement WTO Symposium on Government Procurement Agreement 17 September

More information

Greening productivity measurement Environmentally adjusted multifactor productivity growth

Greening productivity measurement Environmentally adjusted multifactor productivity growth Greening productivity measurement Environmentally adjusted multifactor productivity growth Policy Perspectives 2. Greening productivity measurement 1 The framework Towards a more comprehensive picture

More information

Climate Risks of Sales Forecasts: Evidence from Satellite Readings of Soil Moisture

Climate Risks of Sales Forecasts: Evidence from Satellite Readings of Soil Moisture Climate Risks of Sales Forecasts: Evidence from Satellite Readings of Soil Moisture Christopher Hansman 1 Harrison Hong 2 Frank Weikai Li 3 Jiangmin Xu 4 1 Imperial College London 2 Columbia University

More information

A Ten Year Strategic Outlook for the Global Flexible Plastic Packaging Market. Sample pages. Commodity Inside Ltd

A Ten Year Strategic Outlook for the Global Flexible Plastic Packaging Market. Sample pages. Commodity Inside Ltd A Ten Year Strategic Outlook for the Global Flexible Plastic Packaging Market Sample pages Chapter 1- Executive summary 1.1 Changes in the global flexible plastic packaging industry 1.2 Cost effectiveness

More information

TERMS OF REFERENCE DK-Copenhagen: Outlooks on water use for the 2005 State of the Environment and Outlook Report

TERMS OF REFERENCE DK-Copenhagen: Outlooks on water use for the 2005 State of the Environment and Outlook Report Annex II TERMS OF REFERENCE DK-Copenhagen: Outlooks on water use for the 2005 State of the Environment and Outlook Report 1. Background information Open call for Tender EEA/RNC/03/007 The 2005 State of

More information

The REDD+ Partnership

The REDD+ Partnership The Norwegian Climate and Forest Initiative The REDD+ Partnership Andreas Dahl-Jørgensen The Government of Norway s International Climate and Forest Initiative 6th meeting of the FCPF Partipicants Committee

More information

Government at a Glance 2009

Government at a Glance 2009 Government at a Glance 2009 Summary in English Government at a Glance 2009 identifies several key governance challenges and raises fundamental questions facing governments as they reassess their roles,

More information

Climate change: Questions and Answers on the UN climate conference in Durban

Climate change: Questions and Answers on the UN climate conference in Durban MEMO/11/825 Brussels, 24 November 2011 Climate change: Questions and Answers on the UN climate conference in Durban 1. Why another climate change conference? Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate

More information

Background and objectives

Background and objectives Workshop on greenhouse gas emission projections 12-13 December 2006, European Environment Agency, Copenhagen Background and objectives André Jol Head of Group climate change and energy European Environment

More information

Economic and Social Council

Economic and Social Council United Nations Economic and Social Council Distr.: General 23 July 2012 ECE/TIM/2012/11 Original: English Economic Commission for Europe Timber Committee Seventieth session Geneva, 16 19 October 2012 Item

More information

ENVIRONMENT. Achieving CONCEPT PAPER

ENVIRONMENT. Achieving CONCEPT PAPER ASIA SIA-EUROPE ENVIRONMENT FORUM 5 TH ROUNDTABLE Achieving Urban Sustainability: Integrated Environmental Management 28-30 November Shenzhen, China CONCEPT PAPER SUMMARY A roundtable discussion among

More information

Global work on climate change statistics and indicators and adaptation-related SDG indicators

Global work on climate change statistics and indicators and adaptation-related SDG indicators Global work on climate change statistics and indicators and adaptation-related SDG indicators Workshop on national adaptation goals/indicators and their relationship with the SDGs and the Sendai Framework

More information

OECD BLUE: Biodiversity, Land Use and Ecosystems. What s happening and beyond. WHAT S HAPPENING BLUE and beyond.

OECD BLUE: Biodiversity, Land Use and Ecosystems. What s happening and beyond. WHAT S HAPPENING BLUE and beyond. OECD BLUE: Biodiversity, Land Use and Ecosystems What s happening 2017-18 and beyond WHAT S HAPPENING BLUE 2017-2018 and beyond. 1 OECD BLUE: Biodiversity, Land Use and Ecosystems What s happening 2017-18

More information

Crop production - Coarse grains

Crop production - Coarse grains PART 1 Crop production - Coarse grains Coarse grains are cereal grains other than wheat and rice that include maize (corn in the United States), barley, sorghum, rye, and oats. The global demand for these

More information

CONCEPT PAPER. ASIA-EUROPE ENVIRONMENT FORUM 4 TH ROUNDTABLE Combine or Combust! Co-operating on Chemicals and Hazardous Substances Management

CONCEPT PAPER. ASIA-EUROPE ENVIRONMENT FORUM 4 TH ROUNDTABLE Combine or Combust! Co-operating on Chemicals and Hazardous Substances Management ASIA-EUROPE ENVIRONMENT FORUM 4 TH ROUNDTABLE Combine or Combust! Co-operating on Chemicals and Hazardous Substances Management 30 November-1 December Brussels, Belgium CONCEPT PAPER SUMMARY A roundtable

More information

Siem Reap Declaration

Siem Reap Declaration Siem Reap Declaration Enhancing Joint Efforts and Partnerships towards Achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals in the Mekong River Basin Preamble 5 th April 2018 We, the Heads of Government of

More information

National-level factsheets include the following components: Historical and future BAU growth trajectories in the transport sector, based on NCs

National-level factsheets include the following components: Historical and future BAU growth trajectories in the transport sector, based on NCs NationalLevel Emissions Fact Sheet Methodology October 2015 To capture a more comprehensive picture of transport sector emissions at a global scale, there is a need to expand this knowledge base to a representative

More information