Ramphal Institute(@Ramphal_Inst) 's Twitter Profileg
Ramphal Institute

@Ramphal_Inst

NGO working with Commonwealth of Nations to combat air pollution and climate change

#AirSolution21

ID:2190589592

linkhttps://www.ramphalinstitute.org/ calendar_today12-11-2013 15:50:31

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Ramphal has just published on its website a tribute to the late Queen Elizabeth, and condolescences to the royal family.

To read it, feel free to follow the link:

ramphalinstitute.org/blogs/queen-el…

Ramphal has just published on its website a tribute to the late Queen Elizabeth, and condolescences to the royal family. To read it, feel free to follow the link: ramphalinstitute.org/blogs/queen-el…
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Queen Elizabeth II (1952 - 2022) was Head of the Commonwealth of Nations, a role of great symbolic significance which helped underline the sense of the Commonwealth as a family of nations.

She will be missed all over the world. May she rest in peace.

Queen Elizabeth II (1952 - 2022) was Head of the Commonwealth of Nations, a role of great symbolic significance which helped underline the sense of the Commonwealth as a family of nations. She will be missed all over the world. May she rest in peace.
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The Q&A has now closed! Thank you, everyone, for your questions! Now we're having the closing comments from the panel



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Thank you, Titus Alexander! The Q&A is now open! First to speak right now is Prof Rajan. Feel free to follow the link below and submit your questions about and in the chat!



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.Titus Alexander: Where are 2 large and 4 smaller emittors (of pollution) from each continent to get the ball rolling for that offer political incentive to tackle ? The of Nations seems best to help



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.Titus Alexander: The basis of this is to exchange allowances from developing countries for money from high polluting countries (developed countries almost always worse polluters)



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.Titus Alexander: I think the can be key for helping to create a North-South of the willing - it would need at least 2 major polluting countries and 4 minor ones



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.Harald Heubaum, SOAS Centre for Sustainable Finance: Maybe an ecosystems approach would be better! We must look at the relationship between GCIF and existing funds + policies. How can we bring in the sector, if at all?



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Rajan: Excess forest can also be a reason for 'per capita benefits'. This may be a more complicated method than a clumsy tax but more this would be clear and

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Rajan: It is not a one size fits all, it allows flexiblity around different country's policies, and even self-financing! An allocation of self-responsibility is almost absent, except for a few of small, developing countries

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Rajan has devised a formula for creating a flexible carbon tax for who pays how much, and who might receive money because they are below the polluting average globally



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