5.3 Sources of Barriers and Opportunities
Barriers to climate change mitigation are inherent to the process of development.
Sustainable development in a participatory framework can minimize these barriers,
but the inequitable distribution of income and wealth forms a core feature of
barriers to effective implementation of any type of intervention, and those
related to climate change are no exception. The poor in any society bear a disproportionate
burden of the impact of externalities. Climate change affects them more, because
they often lack the infrastructure to withstand its impacts. The poor also pay
more as a proportion of their income for energy services, and often tend to
use traditional fuels secured outside the formal market system. They are not
able to access subsidized fuels for instance, because they do not have the collateral
to access these fuels and the equipment to use them. Appropriate ways of financing
would be one way to overcome such barriers, provided they explicitly account
for the non-existence of markets for some segments of society. The issue of
segmentation is valid for firms as well. Small and medium-sized firms for instance
face information and market-structure barriers that well-structured large firms
can readily overcome with the resources at their disposal.
Lifestyles, behaviour, and consumption patterns all evolve as societies develop
within their own socio-cultural contexts. With the advent of global communications
these factors are being increasingly influenced by changes that are taking place
in societies residing thousands of miles away. The communication channels may
be viewed as an opportunity to influence the manner in which tomorrows
society might develop in countries where modern but resource-consumptive technologies
and lifestyles have not taken root. Progress in achieving climate change mitigation
will depend on how well the seeds of mitigative technological change can be
planted and nurtured.
As a prelude to the more detailed sectoral discussion in Section
5.4, this section provides a general overview of the process of technological
innovation, and the different sources of barriers to the diffusion of new technology
and practices, as well as the policy opportunities that they represent. This
section is organized by the following categories: prices, financing, trade and
environment, market structure, institutional frameworks, information provision;
and social, cultural and behavioural norms and aspirations. Within each of these
areas, some of the barriers represent failures or imperfections in markets,
policies, or other institutions that lie between the status-quo of the market
potential and the possible achievement of the economic potential. Other barriers
are aspects of institutions or social and cultural systems that economists may
not characterize as market imperfections, but which nonetheless limit diffusion
of GHG-efficient technology. These latter barriers separate the economic and
socioeconomic potentials. Within each of the subsections below barriers and
opportunities in both categories are discussed.
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