GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2021
Autor(a) principal: Leão, Eduardo Baltar de Souza
Orientador(a): Nascimento, Luis Felipe Machado do
Banca de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: eng
Instituição de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Não Informado pela instituição
Departamento: Não Informado pela instituição
País: Não Informado pela instituição
Palavras-chave em Português:
Palavras-chave em Inglês:
Link de acesso: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/232277
Resumo: Cities are considered core of the global climate change mitigation and strategic low-carbon development and city-level study is a trend for climate change responses studies. The literature review identified three gaps that guided this research: (I) There is lack of consistent and comparable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data at the city level; (II) it is necessary to analyze enabling factors that lead to effective urban climate governance and (III) there is a geographical bias of empirical climate governance studies focused on cities from Global North and developed countries realities. To address these gaps, considering the reality of Global South, this thesis had the general objectives of to analyze (I) the quality and gaps of GHG inventories and (II) the main drivers and barriers to climate agenda strengthening in Brazilian cities. Four manuscripts were developed to reach this objective. The first analyzed the differences among the main existing GHG accounting methodologies for cities and identified gaps in carbon inventories of twenty-four Brazilian cities. The second paper compared GHG emissions results of forty-seven Brazilian cities, applying different GHG accounting methodologies. It highlighted characteristics, similarities, and differences of these methodologies, showing how they can impact GHG results. The third and fourth articles discussed about the climate agenda advance in the city of Recife in Brazil. The third paper is a city profile which discusses how geographical characteristics and the historical urbanization process of the city have contributed to the climate risks and vulnerabilities. It evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries. The fourth paper is a case study which discusses the climate actions adopted in Recife and it examines the main drivers and barriers to their effective implementation, comparing to examples from literature. The main important findings are: (I) There are two main types of GHG reporting gaps: incompleteness and lack of transparency which hinder the accuracy, assessment of results and comparability between cities; (II) to analyze GHG reports and to compare results, it is essential to identify methodology, base year, emission sources included, global warming potential, and calculation methods, information which are not transparent in several reports; (III) the drivers to climate action identified include having committed leadership, being part of a multinational network of cities and multilevel governance which supports existing theory, as well as identified climate risks, much in contrast to other European cases; (IV) It is fundamental to institutionalize the climate agenda in the local government to avoid political interferences, which was considered a primary barrier. The thesis provides insights for academics and policymakers on how develop broader, completer, and more transparent GHG inventories and it evidences precautions that should be taken when analyzing a city GHG report. It also evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries, providing insights to academics and policymakers on low carbon strategies for cities. Moreover, it suggests steps that can assist cities to adopt climate actions, particularly in developing or less developed countries.
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spelling Leão, Eduardo Baltar de SouzaNascimento, Luis Felipe Machado do2021-11-27T04:51:37Z2021http://hdl.handle.net/10183/232277001134232Cities are considered core of the global climate change mitigation and strategic low-carbon development and city-level study is a trend for climate change responses studies. The literature review identified three gaps that guided this research: (I) There is lack of consistent and comparable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data at the city level; (II) it is necessary to analyze enabling factors that lead to effective urban climate governance and (III) there is a geographical bias of empirical climate governance studies focused on cities from Global North and developed countries realities. To address these gaps, considering the reality of Global South, this thesis had the general objectives of to analyze (I) the quality and gaps of GHG inventories and (II) the main drivers and barriers to climate agenda strengthening in Brazilian cities. Four manuscripts were developed to reach this objective. The first analyzed the differences among the main existing GHG accounting methodologies for cities and identified gaps in carbon inventories of twenty-four Brazilian cities. The second paper compared GHG emissions results of forty-seven Brazilian cities, applying different GHG accounting methodologies. It highlighted characteristics, similarities, and differences of these methodologies, showing how they can impact GHG results. The third and fourth articles discussed about the climate agenda advance in the city of Recife in Brazil. The third paper is a city profile which discusses how geographical characteristics and the historical urbanization process of the city have contributed to the climate risks and vulnerabilities. It evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries. The fourth paper is a case study which discusses the climate actions adopted in Recife and it examines the main drivers and barriers to their effective implementation, comparing to examples from literature. The main important findings are: (I) There are two main types of GHG reporting gaps: incompleteness and lack of transparency which hinder the accuracy, assessment of results and comparability between cities; (II) to analyze GHG reports and to compare results, it is essential to identify methodology, base year, emission sources included, global warming potential, and calculation methods, information which are not transparent in several reports; (III) the drivers to climate action identified include having committed leadership, being part of a multinational network of cities and multilevel governance which supports existing theory, as well as identified climate risks, much in contrast to other European cases; (IV) It is fundamental to institutionalize the climate agenda in the local government to avoid political interferences, which was considered a primary barrier. The thesis provides insights for academics and policymakers on how develop broader, completer, and more transparent GHG inventories and it evidences precautions that should be taken when analyzing a city GHG report. It also evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries, providing insights to academics and policymakers on low carbon strategies for cities. Moreover, it suggests steps that can assist cities to adopt climate actions, particularly in developing or less developed countries.application/pdfengGestão ambientalCréditos de carbonoMeio ambienteInventárioClimate actionClimate governanceCarbon accountingGHG inventoriesBrazilian citiesGHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian citiesinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulEscola de AdministraçãoPrograma de Pós-Graduação em AdministraçãoPorto Alegre, BR-RS2021doutoradoinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001134232.pdf.txt001134232.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain421405http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/232277/2/001134232.pdf.txt02e345387f3d40633cfe5c771eee91d6MD52ORIGINAL001134232.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf3309443http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/232277/1/001134232.pdfb5659f29923fa07010a778b25f414603MD5110183/2322772021-12-06 05:38:03.340991oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/232277Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttps://lume.ufrgs.br/handle/10183/2PUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestlume@ufrgs.br||lume@ufrgs.bropendoar:18532021-12-06T07:38:03Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
title GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
spellingShingle GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
Leão, Eduardo Baltar de Souza
Gestão ambiental
Créditos de carbono
Meio ambiente
Inventário
Climate action
Climate governance
Carbon accounting
GHG inventories
Brazilian cities
title_short GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
title_full GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
title_fullStr GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
title_full_unstemmed GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
title_sort GHG inventories and drivers & barriers to climate action : an analysis of Brazilian cities
author Leão, Eduardo Baltar de Souza
author_facet Leão, Eduardo Baltar de Souza
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Leão, Eduardo Baltar de Souza
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Nascimento, Luis Felipe Machado do
contributor_str_mv Nascimento, Luis Felipe Machado do
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Gestão ambiental
Créditos de carbono
Meio ambiente
Inventário
topic Gestão ambiental
Créditos de carbono
Meio ambiente
Inventário
Climate action
Climate governance
Carbon accounting
GHG inventories
Brazilian cities
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Climate action
Climate governance
Carbon accounting
GHG inventories
Brazilian cities
description Cities are considered core of the global climate change mitigation and strategic low-carbon development and city-level study is a trend for climate change responses studies. The literature review identified three gaps that guided this research: (I) There is lack of consistent and comparable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data at the city level; (II) it is necessary to analyze enabling factors that lead to effective urban climate governance and (III) there is a geographical bias of empirical climate governance studies focused on cities from Global North and developed countries realities. To address these gaps, considering the reality of Global South, this thesis had the general objectives of to analyze (I) the quality and gaps of GHG inventories and (II) the main drivers and barriers to climate agenda strengthening in Brazilian cities. Four manuscripts were developed to reach this objective. The first analyzed the differences among the main existing GHG accounting methodologies for cities and identified gaps in carbon inventories of twenty-four Brazilian cities. The second paper compared GHG emissions results of forty-seven Brazilian cities, applying different GHG accounting methodologies. It highlighted characteristics, similarities, and differences of these methodologies, showing how they can impact GHG results. The third and fourth articles discussed about the climate agenda advance in the city of Recife in Brazil. The third paper is a city profile which discusses how geographical characteristics and the historical urbanization process of the city have contributed to the climate risks and vulnerabilities. It evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries. The fourth paper is a case study which discusses the climate actions adopted in Recife and it examines the main drivers and barriers to their effective implementation, comparing to examples from literature. The main important findings are: (I) There are two main types of GHG reporting gaps: incompleteness and lack of transparency which hinder the accuracy, assessment of results and comparability between cities; (II) to analyze GHG reports and to compare results, it is essential to identify methodology, base year, emission sources included, global warming potential, and calculation methods, information which are not transparent in several reports; (III) the drivers to climate action identified include having committed leadership, being part of a multinational network of cities and multilevel governance which supports existing theory, as well as identified climate risks, much in contrast to other European cases; (IV) It is fundamental to institutionalize the climate agenda in the local government to avoid political interferences, which was considered a primary barrier. The thesis provides insights for academics and policymakers on how develop broader, completer, and more transparent GHG inventories and it evidences precautions that should be taken when analyzing a city GHG report. It also evidences factors that can decisively assist cities to strength the climate agenda, mainly in developing or less developed countries, providing insights to academics and policymakers on low carbon strategies for cities. Moreover, it suggests steps that can assist cities to adopt climate actions, particularly in developing or less developed countries.
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