- Terry Barker
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name = Terry Barker|Dr. Terry Barker
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footnotes =Terry Barker is an international authority on the theory and application of large-scale economy-energy-environment (E3) models, which he has developed for the
United Kingdom , and theEuropean Union .Fact|date=September 2008 With the help of the models, he applies empirical analysis to international trade theory and to policies for the mitigation ofgreenhouse gases using economic instruments. Dr Barker has also held various research and editorial positions under the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Control (IPCC) and he was one of the contributors named by the IPCC when it won theNobel Peace Prize for 2007 [ [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/2007/press.html Nobel Peace Prize] ] jointly withAl Gore . Since 2005, he has been the Director of the Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research (4CMR) [ [http://www.landecon.cam.ac.uk/research/eeprg/4cmr/index.htm Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research (4CMR)] ] , part of the Department of Land Economy, University of Cambridge. He is also the Chairman of [http://www.cambridgeeconometrics.com/ Cambridge Econometrics] , having helped to found the company in 1985, and the chairman of the Cambridge Econometrics Trust for the Promotion of New Thinking in Economics, a charitable organisation to which he donated control of the company. The trust ensures that the company's view of economic theory is adhered to and applied in its work. This view is distinctively not neoclassical (that is, not mainstream) and is summarised in the objectives of the trust. He is also a member of the Editorial Board of Economic Systems Research.Fact|date=September 2008In his work for the IPCC, he was a Co-ordinating Lead Author (CLA) for the chapter on cross-sectoral mitigation in the Fourth Assessment Report, 2007. He had been a CLA for the Third Assessment Report, 2001, taking responsibility for the chapter on the effects of greenhouse gas mitigation policies on the global energy industries. He was a member of the core writing team for the Synthesis Report
Climate Change , 2001. Since 2000, he has instigated and worked on projects building a global E3 model (E3MG) with initial emphasis on modelling the E3 structures of China and Japan.Fact|date=September 2008 Since 2004, he has been working as member of a UK Tyndall Centre project to develop E3MG as a 20-region world model, designed to analyse GHG mitigation policies underendogenous technological change. In the 1990s, he was appointed the Project Co-ordinator of the pan-European project developing and applying an E3 model for Europe (E3ME), partly funded by theEuropean Commission , analysing energy and fiscal policies including the equity effects of environmental fiscal reform. Previously he was Principal Investigator for projects funded under the UK ESRC’s Global Environmental Change Programme ‘Developing an E3 model of the UK economy’ and ‘Greenhouse gas abatement through fiscal policy’. He worked with Professor Sir Richard Stone, theNobel Laureate in economics, in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Cambridge, succeeding him in 1983 as the director of the [http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/research/cgp/ Cambridge Growth Project] , a team of economists within the department that developed the original MDM structural model of the British Economy. His current research interests include: real carbon prices, induced technological change and long-term economic growth; systematic modelling of policies to achieve the UK 60% CO2 reduction target; ex post evaluation of the UK Climate Change Levy; understanding and projecting UK investment in good-quality combined heat and power; and the effects of global warming on energy demand.Recent articles
*'The macroeconomic rebound effect and the world economy', under review for "Energy Efficiency". (with Athanasios Dagoumas and Jonathan Rubin)
*‘Climate change, social justice and development', Special Issue of "Development on social justice", 2008. (with Serban Scrieciu and David Taylor)
*'Achieving the EU's 2˚C target through carbon trading', "Environmental Chemistry Group Bulletin", The Royal Society of Chemistry, UK, July, 2008.
*'The economics of avoiding dangerous climate change', Editorial for the Special Issue of "Climatic Change" on “The Stern Review”, 2008.
*'The Stern Review and the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report: implications for interaction between policymakers and climate experts', Special Issue of "Climatic Change" on “The Stern Review and its Critics”, 2008. (with Klaus Hasselmann)
*'Achieving the G8 50% target: modelling induced and accelerated technological change using the macro-econometric model E3MG' "Climate Policy" Special Issue on the Low Carbon Society, Vol. 8 pp. S30-45. 2008. (with Tim Foxon and Serban Scricieu)Books
*"International Competitiveness and Environmental Policies", (editor with Jonathan Köhler, co-author of 2 chapters), Edward Elgar, 1998.
*"Global Warming and Energy Demand", (editor with Paul Ekins and Nick Johnstone, co-author of two chapters and sole author of one chapter) Routledge, 1995, ISBN 0-415-10980-9 and ISBN 0-415-11601-5 (pbk), pp. 336+xvi.
*Disaggregation in Economic Modelling (editor with M.H. Pesaran, co-author of one chapter and sole author of one chapter) Routledge, London, 1990, ISBN 0-415-00918-9, pp. 348+xiv.
*"The British Economy after Oil: Manufacturing or Services?" (editor with Paul Dunne and author of one chapter) Croom Helm Ltd., London, 1988.
*"The Cambridge Multisectoral Dynamic Model of the British Economy", (editor with William Peterson and (co-)author of four chapters). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987.
*"Oil or Industry?" Energy, Industrialisation and Economy Policy: Issues in Canada, Mexico, Norway and the United Kingdom (editor with Vladimir Brailovsky and author of three chapters). Academic Press, London. 1981.
*"Economic Structure and Policy" (editor and (co-)author of five chapters). Chapman and Hall, London, 1976.
*"The Determinants of Britain's Visible Imports, 1949-1966", Volume 10 in A Programme for Growth. Chapman and Hall, London December 1970.References
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