admin on June 7th, 2008
INTACT Publications by date
Friedemann Müller | Alex Riechel
Options for Future Climate Policy: Transatlantic Perspectives
Project paper, October 2005, 123 Seiten
Alex Riechel | Aldo Venturelli
Building a Foundation for Transatlantic Climate Policy
Project paper, Mai 2005, 79 Seiten
John Ashton | Tom Burke
The Geopolitics of Climate Change
SWP Comments 2004/05, Mai 2004, 4 Seiten
Alexander Ochs | Aldo Venturelli
Towards a Transatlantic Consensus on Climate Change
Project paper, Mai 2004, 127 Seiten
Michael Grubb | Richard Stewart
Promoting Climate-Friendly Technologies: International Perspectives and Issues
Project paper, March 2004, 11 Seiten
Kevin Baumert | Chandrashekhar Dasgupta | Benito Müller
How Can the Transatlantic Partners Help in Addressing Developing Country Emissions?
Project paper, March 2004, 15 Seiten
Friedemann Müller | Michael Oppenheimer
Climate Change: The Case for Long Term Targets
Project paper, March 2004, 8 Seiten
Carina Bachofen
Energy Scenarios in the United States and in the European Union
Project paper, March 2004
Nigel Purvis | Laurence Tubiana
Controlling the Cost of Transatlantic Climate Change Policies
Project paper, March 2004, 9 Seiten
Marcus Schaper
Export Credit Agencies and Climate Change: What Can They Do about It?
Project paper, January 2004, 10 Seiten
Friedemann Müller
Kyoto Protocol at a dead end?
SWP Comments 2003/15, October 2003, 4 Seiten
Alexander Ochs
Introduction to the High-Level Transatlantic Dialogue on Climate Change at the Villa Vigoni October 16-18, 2003
Project paper, October 2003, 50 Seiten
Alexander Ochs
Reviving Transatlantic Cooperation towards a Global Threat
Project paper, February 2003, 20 Seiten
Friedemann Müller | Claudia Neumann | Alexander Ochs
Introduction to the High-level Transatlantic Workshop on Climate Change at Washington, D.C., November 18, 2002
Project paper, November 2002, 29 Seiten
Astrid Harnisch
Developments in U.S. Climate Policy since the Inauguration of George W. Bush
Project paper, August 2002
Alexander Ochs
Chances for a New Transatlantic Commitment to the Global Challenge of Climate Change: The US Perspective
Project paper, June 2002, 4 Seiten
Alexander Carius | Dennis Tänzler
Transatlantic Dialogue on Climate Change - The New Agenda
Project paper, Mai 2002, 5 Seiten
admin on June 7th, 2008
INTACT’s project director is Dr. Friedemann Müller. He is head of the Research Unit Global Issues at SWP. Climate change as a global governance issue is a major subject within the research program of this unit. Dr. Müller has been publishing on these issues since 1994, and has been working closely with government officials since the first Conference of Parties (COP1) of the Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC) in Berlin (1995). In 1996, he was asked to work for several months with the Policy Planning Staff of the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He has also testified before the Enquete commission “Sustainable Energy Use” of the German Bundestag. Dr. Müller is the chairman of the “Working Group Climate Policy” (WGCP) founded in May 2001, which includes high-level experts from German government, parliament, business and the sciences.
Alex Riechel serves as INTACT’s project manager. Mr. Riechel previously worked as a fellow in the Chemicals and Waste Management Programme at the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR). He holds a B.Sc. in chemistry and a B.A. in history from Brown University and has studied at the University of Constance.
Due to Alex’ absence from Berlin, Ivan Koenig has been acting as project assistance since November 1, 2005. He is a post graduate student at the College of Europe in Bruge
admin on June 7th, 2008
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admin on June 7th, 2008
The International Network to Advance Climate Talks (INTACT) was initiated in 2001 as a project of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) with financial support from the German Marshall Fund of the United States. INTACT has since then established itself as a leading forum in the transatlantic climate policy debate.
During this period, frequently marked by severe political differences between Europe and the United States, particularly with regard to climate policy, INTACT has succeeded in bringing together top representatives of government, industry and academia from both sides of the Atlantic to develop pragmatic approaches for confronting the global challenge of climate change.
By demonstrating the political and economic feasibility of effective climate policy on the basis of applied policy research, INTACT seeks to raise awareness and reshape perceptions about climate policy among key decisionmakers and the broader public. To facilitate this task, INTACT has forged partnerships with several major policy research institutions including The Brookings Institution.
Since January 2005, INTACT has been supported by a generous grant from the Robert Bosch Stiftung, in addition to the funding received from the German Marshall Fund