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The '''EU’s stance''' on climate justice is that financial support to developing countries should be based on '''"low carbon development strategies"''' developed by them. These should set out which measures a country can take without additional financial and technical assistance. The [[European Commission]] also proposes that developed countries can contribute via the use of '''carbon crediting mechanisms and public funding'''. Public financial contributions should be based on emission levels and each country’s economic capability<ref>"Climate action", retrieved from: https://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/international/cooperation_en</ref>.
 
'''The European Economic and Social Committee''' is a '''consultative body of the European Union''' and has one specific institution that focuses on sustainability - the [[Sustainable Development Observatory]]. The [[Sustainable Development Observatory]] responds to the need for a '''coherent approach to sustainable development''', including social, environmental and economic dimensions through hearings, conferences, exchange of best practice, local workshops and actions and impact studies.
In terms of International Cooperation, in order to achieve the [[UN 2030 agenda for sustainable development|UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development]] the first step is the '''mapping exercise of external policies'''. It also needs to identify the real gaps that exist between current external policies and the future ones. The future ones should include in a balanced and fair way, the economic, social and environmental pillars of the 2030 Agenda. For this, the EU needs to make civil society organisations in third countries '''real partners in the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.''' The [[European Commission]] has drafted a [http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/sites/devco/files/swd-key-european-actions-2030-agenda-sdgs-390-20161122_en.pdf document] establishing the '''priorities, policies, funds and other actions''' cover all Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This document assures they provide a '''significant contribution''' to the implementation of the SDGs, both within the EU and through EU external action. The EU has created and supported internal and international projects and funds to help climate vulnerable countries and to support alternative energy development, but can it '''use its soft powers to influence major emerging economic powers to follow the same path'''?
- [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]]
- [[The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]]
- [[Sustainable Development Observatory]]
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