Global Warming, Nobel Peace Prize and the Emerging 'Blue Economy'

10 Pages Posted: 16 Oct 2007 Last revised: 24 Jul 2009

See all articles by Dipankar Dey

Dipankar Dey

Nilkantha Trust for Studies on Bay of Bengal Region; Department of Business Management, University of Calcutta

Date Written: October 14, 2007

Abstract

This study attempts to analyze the significance of the three consecutive Nobel Peace Prizes, announced after the Kyoto Protocol came into force in February 2005, in establishing a complex system of emission economics which is reorganizing the globe into blue and green zones. The paper concludes that those Peace Prizes might have been awarded with an expectation that affirmative actions towards achieving a 'common goal' of mitigating 'global warming', through the introduction of improved production technology supplied by the Northern countries, would reduce the 'global stress', specially in the Southern economies, paving way to 'global peace', in the near future.

At the Major Economic Forum (MEF) in Italy, held during second week of July 2009, the intense pressure put by G8 countries on the emerging Southern economies like India to accept targets for emission reduction is a conspicuous evidence of this unfolding agenda.

Keywords: nobel peace prize, global warming, blue economy, global supply chain, nuclear energy

JEL Classification: A10

Suggested Citation

Dey, Dipankar, Global Warming, Nobel Peace Prize and the Emerging 'Blue Economy' (October 14, 2007). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1021675 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1021675

Dipankar Dey (Contact Author)

Nilkantha Trust for Studies on Bay of Bengal Region ( email )

J 48 Banerjee Para
Garia
Kolkata, 700 084
India

Department of Business Management, University of Calcutta ( email )

J 48 Banerjee Para
Garia
Kolkata, 700 084
India

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