Skoči na glavni sadržaj

Izvorni znanstveni članak

https://doi.org/10.20901/pm.62.4.07

EU Leadership in Climate Diplomacy: Features and Prospects

Oleksandr Rudyk orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-7412-7483 ; National University of Ostroh Academy, Ukraine
Tetiana Sydoruk orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-7468-7672 ; National University of Ostroh Academy, Ukraine


Puni tekst: engleski pdf 411 Kb

str. 231-252

preuzimanja: 210

citiraj


Sažetak

Climate diplomacy within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is a unique negotiation arena due to the practical‎ and far-reaching implications of climate action, the broadest possible national ‎representation, and the unprecedented time horizon of the Convention’s operation.‎ Therefore, assessing the current status and prospects of climate leadership ‎requires analyzing climate negotiations from the perspective of “small ‎steps” and those aspects of international climate cooperation on issues which ‎demand deep expertise and synchronized work at the technical level. At the‎ annual Climate Conferences of the Parties to the UNFCCC (COPs), there is a‎ growing tension with regard to raising the ambition of Nationally Determined‎ Contributions (NDCs) and conducting the Global Stocktake (GST). A source ‎of this tension is the increasing activity of developing countries. Their interests‎– overcoming the consequences of climate change, financing the energy‎ transition, and the risks of relocating carbon-intensive industries – align with‎ common interests. However, the search for compromise positions slows down ‎the negotiation process. As a result, a false impression of a lack of leadership ‎in international climate negotiations is formed. ‎The article aims to identify the direction of transformation and the features ‎of EU climate leadership based on classical typologies of political leadership,‎ examine the EU’s role in the UNFCCC process, and characterize the ‎prospects for the united Europe’s leadership in climate diplomacy. Therefore, ‎the article examines the participation of the EU as a party to the UNFCCC at‎ COPs to consider the prospects of climate leadership. It reviews the main negotiating ‎positions of the EU and the outcomes of conferences that influenced ‎the initial dynamics of climate diplomacy (in 1997, 2009, 2011, and 2015) as ‎well as the four most recent conferences that demonstrate current trends and‎ the EU’s role as an active participant in negotiations (2021–2025). The results ‎show that the EU’s climate diplomacy exhibits characteristics of all four ‎types of leadership. Ideational leadership is evident in its consistent promotion ‎of scientifically grounded climate targets in international negotiations;‎ directional leadership in the EU’s pioneering implementation of UNFCCC‎ mechanisms for energy transition in its internal policy; structural leadership in ‎its aspiration to create a transparent and effective climate infrastructure; and‎ instrumental leadership in combining financial, regulatory, and diplomatic levers ‎to accelerate the global climate transition.‎

Ključne riječi

Climate Leadership; Climate Diplomacy; EU Leadership; COP UNFCCC; Energy Transition

Hrčak ID:

344943

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/344943

Datum izdavanja:

27.2.2026.

Posjeta: 407 *