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International Legislative Framework for Sequestration of Organic Carbon in Agricultural Soil as a Climate Change Tool

2019
Scholarly Work
Matus Michalovic
The article presents the most important international treaties in the area of battling climate change and links them to the protection of agriculture soil.

Governing by expertise: the contested politics of (accounting for) land-based mitigation in a new climate agreement

2016
Scholarly Work
Kate Dooley, Aarti Gupta
This article analyzes the contested politics of including (and accounting for) land-based mitigation in a post-2020 climate agreement.

Ocean Iron Fertilization and International Law

2008
Scholarly Work
David Freestone , Rosemary Rayfuse
This article examines the application of the International Law of the Sea to ocean fertilization, with particular reference to the law’s dumping regime, which prohibits the dumping of wastes or other materials from vessels into the ocean.

The International Legal Framework for Climate Engineering

2015
Scholarly Work
Jesse Reynolds
This paper describes international law which is applicable to climate engineering, with a focus on international environmental law, and provides recommendations for future developments.

A Navigational System for Uncharted Waters: The London Convention and London Protocol’s Assessment Framework on Ocean Iron Fertilization

2013
Scholarly Work
Melissa Eick
This article examines the London Convention and London Protocol's measures to bring ocean iron fertilization within their regulatory scope.

Regulatory Framework for Climate-Related Geoengineering Relevant to the Convention on Biological Diversity

2012
Scientific Report
Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity
This study describes the current regulatory and legal framework that may apply to climate-related geoengineering, and identifies the gaps in science based global, transparent and effective control and regulatory mechanisms.

Carbon Capture and Storage – A Legal Perspective

2007
Scholarly Work
Ian Havercroft, Ray Purdy
This paper provides an examination of a number of key carbon capture and storage (CCS) legal mechanisms and regulatory options at the EU and international level and submits proposals for their change to resolve some issues of legal ambiguity.

Legal and regulatory developments associated with carbon dioxide capture and storage: A global update

2009
Scholarly Work
Tom Kerr, Ian Havercroft, Tim Dixon
This paper provides a 2009 update of the regulatory and legal developments of CCS in the European Union, United States, Australia, Canada, and Norway, as part of the IEA’s International CCS Regulator’s Network.

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