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Liberalisation of Environmental Goods & Services and Climate Change
2005
Social Science Research Network
This paper attempts to show how WTO negotiations on liberalisation of environmental goods and services can have a negative or positive impact on the international climate change policy depending on the outcome of the Doha Mandate paragraph 31 debates. Certainly there has been no significant progress on the definition or classification of environmental goods and services given the wide spectrum of positions. However, the size of the environmental market is not little and a pragmatic approach for
doi:10.2139/ssrn.872504
fatcat:mb4x75eqvvdqddn2epx65iibxe