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Climate Change And Green Economy

Blogs

Bonn Climate Conference 2026: Countries push for UN-led just transition mechanism, but finance remains a sticking pointBy: Rudrath Avinashi Bonn Climate Conference 2026: Developing countries push back against climate-linked trade measures at UNFCCC dialogueBy: Trishant Dev Bonn Climate Conference 2026: Countries debate over how to halt deforestation & who pays for the transitionBy: Rudrath Avinashi Bonn Climate Conference 2026: First Veredas Dialogue focuses on increasing finance flows, adaptation finance, and international barriersBy: Upamanyu Das COP30 created roadmap processes on fossil fuels and forests. Here is how countries have respondedBy: Rudrath Avinashi The green industrialisation agenda for the Global South: A conversation with Ilias AlamiBy: Upamanyu Das, Avantika Goswami 17th Petersberg Climate Dialogue attempts to reaffirm multilateral climate action amid geopolitical tensionsBy: Upamanyu Das WB-IMF Spring meetings: Leaders confront geopolitical crisis, global climate agenda threatened by USBy: Sehr Raheja An Equitable Trade Climate Agenda: Rewiring Systemic Policy, Governance, and Knowledge Gaps for EquityBy: Shimukunku Manchishi, Trishant Dev, Avantika Goswami, & Rudrath Avinashi WTO MC14: Key conference outcomes; US stance drives deadlockBy: Trishant Dev, Rudrath Avinashi WTO MC14: Trade-climate agenda pushes ahead as ministers adopt communiqueBy: Trishant Dev WTO MC14: Reform discussions anchor agenda as Ministerial opens in CameroonBy: Trishant Dev, Rudrath Avinashi India unveils new UN climate target: 47% emissions intensity cut by 2035, 60% non-fossil power capacityBy: Upamanyu Das, Sehr Raheja WTO Ministerial: What to expect on climate, green technologiesBy: Trishant Dev, Rudrath Avinashi China is set to unveil its 15th Five-Year Plan — what’s in it for climate?By: Rudrath Avinashi, Sehr Raheja Why green industrialisation can no longer sit outside climate talksBy: Trishant Dev, Avantika Goswami What was it like being at COP30 in Belém? Reflections from a first-time observerBy: Rudrath Avinashi

WORK OVERVIEW

CSE has been well known for influencing the design of international climate policy since well before such policy was enshrined in formal institutions - whether it is the landmark paper released in 1991 by Sunita Narain and Anil Agarwal, calling for a decolonisation of carbon budget accounting, or CSE’s commentary on every UN climate meeting since 1992. CSE has led the discourse in climate policy for over three decades advocating for equity, the principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities, and investing in resilient economies for the poor. The Climate Change and Green Economy Programme is committed to championing the study of the most pressing climate issues relevant for the Global South. CSE’s publications on climate-critical topics, its presence at UNFCCC proceedings such as COP summits and Subsidiary Body meetings, public outreach and advocacy, media engagement, and training programmes are designed to create multipliers in society for climate action.