2011 |
|
Lin, Jolene Environmental Regulation of Biofuels: Limits of the Meta-Standard Approach Journal Article Carbon & Climate L. Rev., pp. 34, 2011. Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: biofuel, EU @article{lin2011environmentalb, title = {Environmental Regulation of Biofuels: Limits of the Meta-Standard Approach}, author = {Jolene Lin}, year = {2011}, date = {2011-01-01}, journal = {Carbon & Climate L. Rev.}, pages = {34}, publisher = {HeinOnline}, abstract = {The promotion of biofuels as afossilfuel alternative has been a significant aspect of the global quest for solutions to mitigate climate change. However, the quick-fix has proven to be problematic as food security and environmental concerns emerge. To address these concerns, the European Union (EU) Renewable Energy Directive contains sustainability criteria that biofuels must fulfill in order to be counted towards attainment of EU or national renewable energy obligations, or to be eligible for financial support. The European Commission (EC) has adopted the meta-standard approach as the compliance mechanism. The meta-standard approach relies heavily on voluntary certification schemes and is an example of regulatory out-sourcing to private actors in European clean development governance. This paper critically examines the limitations of the meta-standard approach, draws comparisons with the Clean …}, keywords = {biofuel, EU}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } The promotion of biofuels as afossilfuel alternative has been a significant aspect of the global quest for solutions to mitigate climate change. However, the quick-fix has proven to be problematic as food security and environmental concerns emerge. To address these concerns, the European Union (EU) Renewable Energy Directive contains sustainability criteria that biofuels must fulfill in order to be counted towards attainment of EU or national renewable energy obligations, or to be eligible for financial support. The European Commission (EC) has adopted the meta-standard approach as the compliance mechanism. The meta-standard approach relies heavily on voluntary certification schemes and is an example of regulatory out-sourcing to private actors in European clean development governance. This paper critically examines the limitations of the meta-standard approach, draws comparisons with the Clean … |