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George Washington University

PPPA6085.11/PMGT6265.80

Global Environment and Energy Policy

Fall Semester 2012

Thursday evenings, 6:10-8:00 p.m.

Funger 207

Dennis W. Johnson, Ph.D.

202-994-5765

This is a graduate level course in comparative public policy, focusing on two major and interrelated themes: the environment and energy. We will focus on several key topics: (1) global institutions and policymaking; (2) the depletion of natural resources and the increasingly aggressive search for their replacement; (3) the divide between rich, industrialized countries and poor, developing countries, the so-called “north-south” divide; (4) we will spend considerable time reading and discussing one of the most intractable problems, that of global climate change; (5) the quest for oil; (6) the challenges associated with fossil fuels, particularly coal, and the production of electricity; (7) the promise, demise, and resuscitation of nuclear power; (8) sustainable energy sources—geothermal, wind, solar; (9) we will pay particular attention to the second largest consumer of energy, China, and its acute environmental problems; (10) finally, we will look toward future decades to see what challenges global policymakers will face.

Throughout the course, we will look at a number of problems associated with individual countries or systems: we will spend considerable time with China, the European Union, India, and examples from other countries, as well as the United States.

Research Papers

This course barely covers the surface of this extraordinary area of inquiry. To supplement our topics, you will have the opportunity to explore global energy and environmental policy in more detail through two research papers.

First Paper: Who Makes Environmental and Energy Policy? You will pick a country (other than the U.S.) or the E.U. and research and write about how environmental/energy policy is made. For example, you might choose Canada as your country of interest. What are the national government agencies that are concerned with energy and the environment? What committees in the parliament are involved? Who are the major non-governmental players (interest groups)? Are there special problems or circumstances affecting how Canada tackles these issues? Ten to twelve pages, counting as 30 percent of your final grade.

Second Paper: What Policies Has Your Country (or the EU) Adopted to Mitigate Global Warming or to Encourage Renewable Energy Sources? This will require you to look specifically at the laws passed, policy initiatives of the central (and perhaps local) government, your country’s participation in international environment or energy summits (like Kyoto, Rio de Janiero). Twelve to fifteen pages, counting as 30 percent of your final grade.

Both of these papers will require some serious digging into original sources, particularly government reports, and will require some advanced planning to make sure that you have chosen a country with enough information and in a language that you can read!

To assist you in doing the preliminary research, Dr. David Ettinger, Gelman Library’s expert on public policy, energy and the environment, will conduct an intensive session on library resources and research guidance. He will also be available for personal research assistance throughout the semester.

How Your Grade will be Determined

There will be four grades given out during the course:

(1)  First Paper: 30 percent of final grade

(2)  Second Paper: 30 percent of final grade

(3)  Oral Presentation: 10 percent of final grade

(4)  Final, take-home examination: 30 percent of final grade

There will be no grade for class discussion or participation—I encourage each of you to participate as fully as possible. I assume that all of you will attend every class session (I’ll be there!) and that you will have read the materials for the evening and are prepared to discuss them. There will be no quizzes.

The Goals for this Course

(a)  Understand the interplay between science, technology, politics and public policy. Through a variety of our readings, we will learn how science and technology create both opportunities and challenges in the field of environmental and energy policy.

(b)  Understand, through an analysis of comparative public policy, how some countries and systems are doing a better job of meeting environmental and energy challenges than others.

(c)  Sharpen your research and writing skills. You will conduct serious graduate level writing. I will demand the highest level of research and analysis, and you, in turn, will be proud of the final products you turn in.

(d)  Sharpen your oral presentation skills. You will present your research findings to me and your classmates with a 10-minute oral report. This will be a formal presentation and you will receive a grade for it.

Academic Integrity:

All members of the university community are expected to exhibit honesty and competence in their academic work. Students have a special responsibility to acquaint themselves with, and make use of, all proper procedures for doing research, writing papers, and taking exams. Members of the community will be presumed to be familiar with the proper academic procedures and will be held responsible for applying them. Deliberate failure to act in accordance with such procedures will be considered academic dishonesty. Academic dishonesty is defined as “cheating of any kind, including misrepresenting one’s own work, taking credit for the work of others without crediting them and without appropriate authorization, and the fabrication of information.” Acts of academic dishonesty are a legal, moral, and intellectual offense against the community and will be prosecuted through the proper university channels. The University Code of Academic Integrity can be found at http://www.gwu.edu/~ntegrity/code.html.

Support for Students with Disabilities:

GW’s Disability Support Services (DSS) provides and coordinates accommodations and other services for students with a wide variety of disabilities, as well as those temporarily disabled by injury or illness. Accommodations are available through DSS to facilitate academic access for students with disabilities. Additional information is available at www.gwu.edu/~dss.

Readings:

Please purchase the following books, from either the GW bookstore or online.

Regina Axelrod et al., The Global Environment: Institutions, Law, and Policy, 3rd ed. (CQ Press, 2011)-paperback

Elizabeth Economy, The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge to China’s Future, 2nd ed. (Cornell, 2010)-paperback

Kathryn Harrison and Lisa Sundstrom, eds., Global Commons, Domestic Decisions: The Comparative Politics of Climate Change (MIT, 2012)-paperback

Michael Klare, The Race for What’s Left: The Global Scramble for the World’s Last Resources (Metropolitan, 2012)-hardcover

Daniel Yergin, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World (Penguin, 2011)-hardcover

Online readings: a number of readings can be retrieved online, and are noted in the syllabus at the appropriate place with this symbol §. You can also download these readings from our Blackboard site.

* * *

SYLLABUS

Week One: August 28

INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL INSTITUTIONS AND REGIMES

Readings:

Alexrod, VanDeveer and Vig, “Introduction,” 1-23, in Axelrod.

Marvin Soros, “Global Institutions and the Environment,” ch. 2 in Axelrod.

Jacqeline Peel, “Environmental Protection in the Twenty-first Century,” ch. 3 in Axelrod.

Downie, “Global Environmental Policy,” ch. 4 in Axelrod.

Week Two: September 6

ABUNDANT AND DWINDLING RESOURCES

Readings:

§Garrett Hardin, “Tragedy of the Commons,” Science 13 (1968): 1243-48, http://www.garretthardinsociety.org/articles_pdf/tragedy_of_the_commons.pdf.

Yergin, Part 2: “Securing the Supply,” chs. 11-16.

Klare, entire book.

§Peter Behr, “Looming Water Crisis,” CQ Researcher (2008), www.globalresearch.com.

§U.S. Department of Energy/International Energy Agency, International Energy Outlook 2011, http://205.254.135.7/forecasts/ieo/pdf/0484(2011).pdf

Your selection of a country (or system) to research is due tonight.

Week Three: September 13

THE “NORTH-SOUTH” DIVIDE

Readings:

Adam Najam, “The View from the South: Developing Countries in Global Environmental Politics,” ch. 12 in Axelrod.

Ulrich Beyerlin, “Bridging North/South Divide in International Environmental Law,” http://www.zaoerv.de/66_2006/66_2006_2_a_259_296.pdf

We will meet at the Gelman Library for a research session with Dr. Ettinger.

Weeks Four, Five and Six: September 20, 27, October 4

COMPARATIVE CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY

Readings:

Yergin, “Climate and Carbon,” chs. 21-26.

Kathryn Harrison and Lisa Sundstrom, “Introduction: Global Commons, Domestic Decisions” ch. 1 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Miranda Schreurs and Yves Tiberghien, “European Union Leadership and Climate Change,” ch. 2 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Kathryn Harrison, “The United States as Outlier: Economic and Institutional Challenges to U.S. Policy,” ch. 3 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Elizabeth DeSombre, “The United States and Global Environmental Politics: Domestic Sources of U.S. Unilateralism,” ch. 10 in Axelrod.

Laura Henry and Lisa Sundstrom, “Russia and the Kyoto Protocol: From Hot Air to Implementation?” ch. 4 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Yves Tiberghien and Miranda Schreurs, “Climate Leadership, Japanese Style,” ch. 5 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Kathryn Harrison, “The Struggle of Ideas and Self-Interest in Canadian Climate Policy,” ch. 6 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Kate Crowley, “Climate Cleer? Kyoto and Australia’s Decade of Recalcitrance,” ch. 7 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Gorild Heggelund, Steinar Andresen, and Inga Buan, “Chinese Climate Policy,” ch. 8 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

Kathryn Harrison and Lisa Sundstrom, “Conclusion: The Comparative Politics of Climate Change,” ch. 9 in Harrison and Sundstrom.

First Research paper is due at class time, October 4

Week Seven: October 11

THE QUEST FOR OIL

Readings:

Yergin, Chs. 1-8 “The New World of Oil.”

Klare, review chapters on oil.

Week Eight: October 18

THE ELECTRIC AGE

Readings:

Yergin, “The Electric Age,” chs. 17-20.

§International Energy Agency, Electricity in India, available at http://www.iea.org/work/2006/gb/publications/india_electricity.pdf

Week Nine: October 25

NUCLEAR POWER

Readings:

§Cameco, “How Nuclear Reactors Work,” http://www.cameco.com/uranium_101/uranium_science/nuclear_reactors/

§Ioannis N. Kessides, “Nuclear Power and Sustainable Energy Policy: Promises and Perils,” World Bank Research Observer, 2009. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/4443/wbro_25_2_323.pdf?sequence=1

§World Nuclear Association, “Fukushima Accident 2011.” http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/fukushima_accident_inf129.html

Regina Axelrod, “Democracy and Nuclear Power: The Czech Case and the Global Nuclear Renaissance,” ch. 14 in Axelrod.

§World Nuclear Association, Nuclear Power in France. http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf40.html

Week Ten: November 1

NEW ENERGIES—RENEWABLES, WIND, THE SUN, AND CONSERVATION

Readings:

Yergin, “New Energies,” chs. 27-32.

§International Solar Energy Society, Renewable Energy Future for the Developing World (2003), http://www.ises.org/shortcut.nsf/to/wp

§International Solar Energy Society, Transitioning to Renewable Energy Future (2003), http://whitepaper.ises.org/ISES-WP-600.pdf

Weeks Eleven and Twelve: November 8, 15

ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT IN CHINA

Readings:

Economy, entire book.

Joanna Lewis and Kelly Gallagher, “Energy and Environment in China,” ch 13 in Axelrod.

§Coal Initiative Reports, “Coal in China: Resources, Uses, and Advanced Coal Technologies,” Pew Center on Global Climate Change (2010) http://www.pewclimate.org/docUploads/coal-in-china-resources-uses-technologies.pdf

Yergin, “China’s Rise” and “China in the Fast Lane,” chs. 9, 10.

“The Warriors of Qiugang,” video from Yale University e360. http://e360.yale.edu/feature/the_warriors_of_qiugang_a_chinese_village_fights_back/2358/

Recommended, but not required:

Judith Shapiro, Mao’s War Against Nature: Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China (Cambridge, 2011), paperback.

Greg Anderson, “State Capitalism and China’s Auto Industry,” (2012). http://china.usc.edu/ShowArticle.aspx?articleID=2729

Second research paper is due at the beginning of class, November 15.

Week Thirteen: December 29

Oral Presentations

Week Fourteen: December 6

ROAD TO THE FUTURE

Readings:

Yergin, “Road to the Future,” chs. 33-35, and Conclusion.

§ExxonMobil, Outlook for Energy to 2030, http://www.exxonmobil.com/Corporate/Files/news_pub_eo2012.pdf

§Shell Oil Company, Shell Energy Scenarios to 2030, http://www-static.shell.com/static/public/downloads/brochures/corporate_pkg/scenarios/shell_energy_scenarios_2050.pdf