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Find Swank Bar Hidden in Wes Anderson-esque Bangkok Hotel

BANGKOK — Ask for the right room inside a style-heavy boutique hotel in Ari to discover a hidden bar whose special cocktails retrace the globetrotting journey of one “Mr. Josh.”

Enter an already-hip neighborhood to find the devoutly hip Josh Hotel, which borrows liberally from the visual style of director Wes Anderson. Step inside and tell staff you’re checking into room No. 72. Key card in hand, pass through a vampy red door to find not a single bed nor well-furnished suite, but a bar called The Key.

The speakeasy, which opened in late August, lays out its concept to serve cocktails invented by fictitious hotel and bar owner Mr. Josh, a world traveler who’s settled in Bangkok. What he looks like is up to guests’ imagination. One hint is a cartoon depiction on a sign out front that’s reminiscent of young reporter Tintin.

The bar, painted in vibrant red (like the reception area and elevator in “The Grand Budapest Hotel”), offers a long list of alcoholic beverages such as negroni, long islands and sazerac. But what barflies must really try is one or more of nine signature cocktails.

A rough day can be pushed away with a sip on the spirit-forward Mr. Josh’s Journey (380 baht). After the bartender takes a torch to it, the blended malt whiskey is served with the fragrance of smoked rosemary and a wafer of caramelized brown sugar. Nibble on the latter from time to time for a break from the heavy, bitter booze.

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‘Mr. Josh’s Journey’

Mr. Josh must’ve visited America sometime between 1950 to 1959 because one of his drinks is called Marilyn 1950s (380 baht). It’s vodka, lime juice, honey syrup and grapefruit bitters. Cinnamon poured on top is a good compliment. Compared to the “Journey,” Marilyn is much easier to drink – and sexier, too.

If none of above suit your fancy, pick your favorite destination:

A Drop of Tokyo (350 baht) mixes vodka with sake joined by wasabi syrup. The Communists (320 baht) blends whiskey with coffee and star anise, a well-known Asian herbal spice, and is served with dried coconut. Josh’s trip to France becomes Sweet as Josephine (380 baht) as he puts truffle oil, raspberry syrup and lime juice in cognac.

Off the menu but available to order, Roasted Coconut (380 baht) is carefully crafted by mixologist Danuwat Into, who won second place at a recent contest challenging them to use local ingredients. The very drink that brought him home the award, it’s a rum-based concoction with smoked coconut water and a pinch of aromatic floral tonic, garnished with a single piece of burnt dried coconut.

Music fans should come on Fridays and Saturdays for full-on jazz music. The space-limited, refurbished meeting room can accommodate up to 24.

The Key Room No. 72, is open 6pm to 2am every day inside Josh Hotel on Soi Ari 4 (North), a few minutes’ walk from BTS Ari.

Josh Hotel opened late last year with designs and decorations inspired by the visual style of American director Wes Anderson. The hotel attracts many visitors who check in for a getaway in Ari and, of course, snaps for their Instagram.

‘Marilyn 1950s’
‘Marilyn 1950s’
‘Mr. Josh’s Journey’
‘Mr. Josh’s Journey’
‘Roasted Coconut’
‘Roasted Coconut’

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Brit, Canadian Linked to Massive Thai Cannabis Export Operation

Police question David Kulik about a suspected cannabis export operation as they take him into custody Monday. Image: Matichon
Police question David Kulik about a suspected cannabis export operation as they take him into custody Monday. Image: Matichon

BANGKOK — The police sent a strong reminder Thursday that weed in any form remains illegal by announcing the arrest of four men, including a Brit and Canadian, suspected of exporting cannabis oil on an industrial scale.

The Narcotics Control Board said the suspects; Englishman Joseph Toole, 67; Canadian David Kulik, 64; Suriyan Suwanchairob, 34; Suppakij Kaewma, 54; were detained Monday and charged with multiple counts relating to the production, possession and sale of Class 5 narcotics from their Samut Prakan factory for over a year.

Following raids earlier this week, the authorities said they seized 70 kilograms of cannabis oil, 6.6 kilograms of the drug in resin form and related tools.

According to police, Toole and Kulik were arrested in Chonburi province, while Suriyan and Suppakij were found in Sakon Nakhon and Bangkok respectively.

They were accused of producing and exporting cannabis oil, which remains illegal under current drug laws, to several countries including Belgium. They allegedly obtained the raw materials from drug rings in Thailand and Laos.

Deputy police commissioner Chalermkiat Sriworakan said the department was tipped off about the group back in March and found their contraband hidden in shredded coconut shells shipping out of the Laemchabang Port. Some of the shipments made it to Antwerp, Belgium, he said.

Gen. Chalermkiat said the initial investigation points to Kulik being one of the investors, while Toole, a former doctor, was in charge of production.

He added that the group is believed to be headed by a Japanese investor. It’s estimated to have exported at least five metric tonnes of cannabis oil to Belgium, which might not be their sole destination. He said investigators are still unsure where else the group sent their products to, and whether more people were involved.

A bill legalizing medical cannabis and kratom is currently under review by the National Legislative Assembly.

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Princess Puzzles Internet With Taxi Cameo

Princess Ubolratana in a taxi. Photo: Nichax / Instagram
Princess Ubolratana in a taxi. Photo: Nichax / Instagram

BANGKOK — Princess Ubolratana posted a photo of herself behind the wheel of a taxi Thursday to the viral approval of many netizens.

“Out of work. Finding a new job. #SideHustlingWhileJobTraining,” read the caption, posted to her private (but widely followed) Instagram account.

The Land Transport Department could not be reached for comment as to what the 67-year-old princess, the eldest child of Queen Sirikit and the late King Bhumibol, was doing in the driver’s seat of a yellow-and-green taxi.

An active social media personality, Princess Ubolratana has a history of going viral for endearingly eccentric posts such as the time she sang Christmas carols, did body percussion, sang pop songs onstage or cheered for Germany during the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

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Muggers Targeting Elderly Ayutthayans Arrested on Father’s Day

Police lead Suporn Supapradit and Saran Taosanya through a “crime reenactment” with Boonpop Yingsawad.
Police lead Suporn Supapradit and Saran Taosanya through a “crime reenactment” with Boonpop Yingsawad.

AYUTTHAYA — Two twenty-something men confessed to targeting elderly motorcyclists and mugging them at machete point on Father’s Day.

Police said Suporn Supapradit, 23, and Saran Taosanya, 21 confessed Wednesday to stealing two elderly men’s motorbikes, which they then traded for yaa baa pills.

“We targeted old people because they don’t fight back. I didn’t mean to hurt them, just threaten them,” Suporn said. “I just got out of jail and couldn’t find work, so I got my friend from prison to get together to do this.”

On Nov. 28, Suporn and Saran were on a motorcycle together when they forced 65-year-old Jame Peuchsing to pull over. After stealing Jame’s bike, they spotted Boonphop Yingsawad, 76, passing on another motorcycle. The pair raced after him and kicked his scooter to the ground before robbing him of his cash – 20 baht.

“I was coming back from the market when the two guys rode next to me and kicked my bike down,” Boonphop said, who sustained injury to a leg and arm.

Police found the two men through security camera footage along Liab Khlong Rom Sai Road in Bangkok’s Bang Sai district.

Suporn and Saran also allegedly confessed to mugging two other elderly people in north of Bangkok in Pathum Thani province.

Suporn said they would sell the stolen motorbikes and trade them for yaa baa. New motorbikes can fetch 60 pills, while older models net 20 to 30 pills, they said.

In March, an elderly Bangkok garbage picker died after being kicked unconscious by a 21-year-old man.

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Two in Republican Shirts Questioned by Police: Rights Group

A photo of the black T-shirt with the red and white emblem associated with the Thai republican group. Image: Thai Lawyer for Human Rights.

BANGKOK — Police briefly detained a man and a woman wearing T-shirts associated with a republican group in public yesterday, according to a civil rights group.

Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said the pair were approached by police officers on Wednesday – a public holiday dedicated to King Rama IX – in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao district and taken to a local police station. They were reportedly released later in the day. An officer at the Lat Phrao Police Station declined to comment.

“I cannot answer any questions about this,” deputy station chief Satapana Junnawat said Thursday.

In an online post, the lawyers group said the two people, who would only identify themselves as Terdsak and Prapan, were approached by officers while they were eating at a McDonald’s and brought to the station for interrogation.

They were reportedly wearing black T-shirts with the emblem of the Organization for a Thai Federation, an underground network that seeks to secede parts of Thailand from the kingdom to establish a republic.

Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said the pair were later released at about 7pm without being charged. Terdsak and Prapan told the group that police warned them not to participate in any activity organized by the republicans.

In September, police arrested at least four people in connection with the pro-republic group. The organization responded to the crackdown by accusing the police of attempting to intimidate its supporters.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misidentified Prapan as a man. In fact, she is a woman. We regret the error.

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Billboard Praising Prayuth as Next PM Replaced

RATCHABURI — A giant billboard calling for the junta leader to remain in power in Ratchaburi province has been taken down following complaints, while a deputy government leader says it was not equivalent to campaigning politically.

The roadside billboard featured an image of Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha shaking hands with British Premier Theresa May and captioned “Go Inter.” After photos of the billboard spread online and drew denunciations, it was replaced Thursday by an advertisement for a temple event.

Erected by a pro-establishment group, the Anti-Corruption Organization of Thailand, the billboard read, “Society seeks an uncorrupted prime minister. Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha is an uncorrupted, determined, dedicated, self-sacrificing, honest and upright prime minister.”

“We’re rooting for you to become prime minister after the election, for you to be able to continue working for the advancement and happiness of the nation,” it continued.

The group in September awarded Prayuth full marks for his anti-corruption efforts. Asked to detail its criteria, the group only said the recognition was due to Prayuth’s “sincerity” in fighting corruption.

Although a junta ban on civilian politics remains in place, Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan said the sign was fine because a royal decree setting an election has yet to be announced, and that Prayuth has not been nominated by any party as a candidate.

“It’s not advertising,” he said. “It’s a sign from an anti-corruption group, not just any individuals.”

When asked by reporters if that means other parties can also erect billboards supporting individuals of their choice, Prawit said he didn’t know, and that “they can do whatever they want as long as it isn’t illegal.”

Residents in the area said the sign was put up earlier this week.

Pictures of the sign that spread online yesterday were met with amused and frustrated comments.

“Where’s the Consumer Protection Office? This billboard is false advertisement, deceiving consumers. Please review,” wrote Facebook user Nui Sittijarounsukchai.

“Such a disrespectful use of a leader of another country for campaigning. A danger from having stupid but hard-working minions,” wrote Twitter user @Phichai.

After the wave of criticism, Facebook user Pongsak Phusitsakul this morning posted pictures showing the sign had been replaced by one for a merit-making event at Wat Pikul Thong. A couple of police officers were also seen inspecting the spot.

Prayuth on Tuesday said he’s interested in working with the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party, one day after it said it would nominate him to serve as the next prime minister.

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โพสต์โดย Pongsak Phusitsakul เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 5 ธันวาคม 2018

 

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Sea Reefs and Sunsets: Living Coral Is Color of the Year

Image: Pantone Color Institute

NEW YORK — It’s the color of underwater reefs hanging on for dear life. The sky at dusk. Some of the latest iPhones and the latest looks on the runways of Marc Jacobs and other top fashion designers. Living Coral has been chosen by the Pantone Color Institute as its 2019 color of the year.

Can a color be convivial? Laurie Pressman, the company’s vice president, considers this saturated orange base with a golden undertone not only warm and welcoming but versatile and life-affirming. It energizes with a softer edge than, say, its pastel and neon color cousins.

“With everything that’s going on today, we’re looking for those humanizing qualities because we’re seeing online life dehumanizing a lot of things,” Pressman told The Associated Press ahead of Wednesday’s annual color unveiling. “We’re looking toward those colors that bring nourishment and the comfort and familiarity that make us feel good. It’s not too heavy. We want to play. We want to be uplifted.”

But do we want to run toward this color of grandmothers? Pressman also sees a retro vibe to Living Coral, in the same way a softer version of the 2018 pick, Ultra Violet, is the shade of some gray heads when hair toners bring on a turn to purple.

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This image released by Pantone Color Institute shows a swatch featuring Living Coral, which Pantone Color Institute has chosen as its 2019 color of the year. Image: Pantone Color Institute via AP

“It’s the emotional nourishment. It’s a big hug,” she said of Living Coral.

How important color analysis is when weighed against, well, the rest of the world is in the eye of the beholder. Pantone is a for-profit enterprise that forecasts color trends, analyzes the psychology of color and advises companies on color for product packaging and brand identity. Its wares come with price tags, but nearly 20 years of choosing colors of the year has been a useful marketing strategy and free, free, free.

Living Coral is ascending, Pressman said, at a time when bleaching due to climate change continues to rob actual coral reefs of their rainbows. It’s a color that seems to work for everybody, across the gender spectrum in apparel and across segments, from art and housewares to home interiors and industrial design.

The color also points to a long and often painful slog over the last decade or so through financial market scares and political crises to environmental chaos and the rise of social media, where saturated color presides, Pressman said.

“We’re seeing so much more saturated color,” she said. “That’s the influence of social media because people want things to stand out. This is definitely a color you see on social media.”

Living Coral is vivifying, but it’s “not so overpowering and in your face,” she said. “It’s bright enough, and engaging.”

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This Sept. 12, 2018 file photo shows a model wearing a coral outfit from the Marc Jacobs spring 2019 collection during Fashion Week in New York. Photo: Kevin Hagen

Officially, Living Coral is Pantone 16-1546. Ever wonder what those Pantone numbers are all about? Well, they’re broken into three pairs and refer to a color’s level of lightness, hue and “chroma,” on various scales. What, you ask, is chroma? It’s a description that combines hue and saturation. A set of letters after the numbers indicate the material or substance upon which the color was printed or otherwise placed, such as dyed cotton or paper.

Coming up with such color standards is one of those other things Pantone does when it’s not announcing colors of the year.

Before Ultra Violet was chosen for 2018, there was Greenery the year before. In 2016, Pantone picked a duo for the first time: Serenity (a baby blue) and Rose Quartz (a light pink).

The selection process spans the year. Pantone’s experts travel the world in search of color influences that gained momentum, from the entertainment industry and traveling art collections to fashion and beauty trends, travel destinations and specialty shows for design and decor.

Story: Leanne Italie

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Pantone Picks Deep Purple ‘Ultra Violet’ as Color of Year

Pantone Color Institute’s Color of the Year is ‘Greenery’

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Huawei CFO Arrested in Canada, Faces Extradition to US

A 2015 file photo of Meng Wanzhou (Image: Huawei)

TORONTO — Canadian authorities said Wednesday that they have arrested the chief financial officer of China’s Huawei Technologies for possible extradition to the United States.

China demanded her immediate release, and a former Canadian envoy to China warned the case might lead to retaliation by the Chinese against American and Canadian executives.

Justice Department spokesman Ian McLeod said Meng Wanzhou was detained in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Saturday.

The arrest took place on the same day Trump met with Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss the trade war after the close of the G-20 summit in Argentina. They agreed to a 90-day truce in an escalating trade war that is threatening world economic growth and has set global investors on edge.

Meng is a prominent member of Chinese society as deputy chairman of the board and the daughter of company founder Ren Zhengfei.

McLeod said a publication ban had been imposed in the case and he could not provide further details. The ban was sought by Meng, who has a bail hearing Friday, he said.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this year that U.S. authorities are investigating whether Chinese tech giant Huawei violated sanctions on Iran.

Huawei issued a statement saying Meng was changing flights in Canada when she was detained “on behalf of the United States of America” to face “unspecified charges” in New York.

“The company has been provided very little information regarding the charges and is not aware of any wrongdoing by Ms. Meng,” the statement said.

Huawei said it complies with all laws and rules where it operates, including export controls and sanctions of the United Nations, the U.S. and European Union.

The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa said her human rights were violated and demanded she be freed.

“The Chinese side firmly opposes and strongly protests over such kind of actions which seriously harmed the human rights of the victim,” the statement said.

A U.S. Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

In April, China appealed to Washington to avoid damaging business confidence following the Wall Street Journal report that U.S. authorities were investigating whether Huawei violated sanctions on Iran amid spiraling technology tensions.

A foreign ministry spokeswoman, Hua Chunying, said then that China hoped the U.S. would refrain from taking actions that could further undermine investor confidence in the U.S. business environment and harm its domestic economy.

That same month Washington barred Huawei rival ZTE Corp. from exporting U.S. technology in a separate case over exports to Iran and North Korea

Trump has threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese goods in response to complaints that Beijing improperly pressures foreign companies to hand over technology. That is widely seen as part of a broader effort by Washington to respond to intensifying competition with Chinese technology industries that Trump says benefit from improper subsidies and market barriers. The escalating trade war is threatening world economic growth and has set global investors on edge.

David Mulroney, a former Canadian ambassador to China, said U.S. and Canadian business executives could face reprisals in China.

“That’s something we should be watching out for. It’s a possibility. China’s plays rough,” Mulroney said. “It’s a prominent member of their society and it’s a company that really embodies China’s quest for global recognition as a technology power.”

Mulroney said Canada should be prepared for “sustained fury” from the Chinese and said it will be portrayed in China as Canada kowtowing to Trump. He also said the Iran allegations are very damaging to Huawei and said China will push back hard.

Wenran Jiang, a senior fellow at the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia, said the Chinese will read the arrest on the same day as the Trump meeting with the Chinese leader as a planned conspiracy to do damage

“She was in transit though Vancouver. That means the intelligence agencies in Canada and the U.S. were tracking her and planning to arrest her for some time,” he said.

He foresees a crisis in relations between the three countries if she is extradited and said any talk of free trade agreement between Canada and China would be over.

U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse, a Republican member of the Senate Armed Services and Banking committees, said Huawei is an agent of China’s communist party and applauded Canada for the arrest.

“Americans are grateful that our Canadian partners have arrested the Chief Financial Officer of a giant Chinese telecom company for breaking U.S. sanctions against Iran,” he said.

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Cambodia Surrogate Mothers Freed After Vowing to Keep Babies

Tammy Davis-Charles, right, an Australian charged with providing commercial surrogacy services, hides her face as she enters the Phnom Penh Municipal Court in 2017 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press
Tammy Davis-Charles, right, an Australian charged with providing commercial surrogacy services, hides her face as she enters the Phnom Penh Municipal Court in 2017 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — Thirty-two Cambodian women who were charged with human trafficking for serving as surrogate mothers have been provisionally released from detention after agreeing to keep the babies rather than giving them up as originally planned, officials said Wednesday.

Bun Samkhan, a spokeswoman for the National Committee for Counter-Trafficking, said the women, who were charged in July with violating surrogacy and human trafficking laws, were released on bail in three groups, the last 17 on Wednesday.

A senior police officer who works at the same agency, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly, said the women were released on humanitarian grounds.

He said they had committed crimes but their babies are innocent, and for that reason the committee requested that the court free them. They had been held at a police hospital.

The identifies of the fathers have not been released.

Acting as an intermediary between an adoptive parent and a pregnant woman carries a penalty of one to six months in prison. The human trafficking offense is punishable by seven to 15 years’ imprisonment.

A Chinese man and four Cambodian women accused of managing the business were charged with the same offenses.

Bun Samkhan said her committee requested the release of the surrogate mothers so they could take care of their babies, with the condition that they keep the children.

“We have told them clearly that these babies belong to you, so you have to take care of them until they grow up, and not sell them,” Bun Samkhan said. “And they agreed.”

Cambodian women who have served as surrogates have said they were offered as much as USD$10,000. The average annual household income in Cambodia is about $1,490, according to the International Monetary Fund. It was not known how much the women in this group were paid.

Cambodia passed a law specifically targeting surrogacy in 2016 as the country was becoming a popular destination for foreign would-be parents seeking women to give birth to their children.

Developing countries are popular for surrogacy because costs are much lower than in countries such as the United States and Australia, where surrogate services can cost around $150,000. The surrogacy business boomed in Cambodia after it was put under tight restrictions in neighboring Thailand. There also were crackdowns in India and Nepal. After Cambodia’s crackdown, the trade shifted to neighboring Laos.

In July last year, a Cambodian court sentenced an Australian woman and two Cambodian associates to 1 1/2 years in prison for providing commercial surrogacy services. The Australian woman was quietly freed earlier this year.

Story: Sopheng Cheang

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Opinion: Why Populist Nationalist Leaders Rewrite Global Climate Talks

President Donald Trump shakes hand with Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte in 2017 during the gala dinner marking ASEAN's 50th anniversary in Manila, Philippines. Athit Perawongmetha / Associated Press
President Donald Trump shakes hand with Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte in 2017 during the gala dinner marking ASEAN's 50th anniversary in Manila, Philippines. Athit Perawongmetha / Associated Press

By Arjuna Dibley, The Conversation

The election of Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil not only marks the rise of another populist nationalist leader on the world stage. It’s also a turning point for the global politics of climate change.

When the new president takes office in January 2019, by my estimate at least 30 percent of global emissions will be generated from democracies governed by populist nationalist leaders.

As climate policymakers meet at this week’s UN climate conference in Poland (a country itself governed by a populist nationalist party) people who care about achieving the Paris Agreement goal should push for and develop new strategies for advancing policies to reduce emissions within countries headed by these leaders.

 

Populism and Cutting National Emissions

What is populist nationalism? Although both populism and nationalism are contested terms, political scientist Francis Fukuyama, offers this tidy synthesis of the characteristics associated with populist nationalists leaders in democracies.

Firstly, these leaders define “the people” narrowly to refer to a single national identity which is oftentimes anti-elitist. Secondly, they promote policies which are popular among their selected people, or base of support, in the short term but may not be in the long-term economic, social or environmental interests of the country. Thirdly, populist nationalists are expert at capitalizing on their supporters’ cultural fears about a loss of status in society.

Over the past five years there have been several populist electoral victories in countries that are among the highest emitters of greenhouse gases. This includes the U.S., India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland and the Philippines. While these regimes each represent a different brand of populist nationalism, they exhibit the basic characteristics I’ve just described.

From my perspective as a scholar focused on global energy and climate policies, it’s clear that the political structure of populist nationalism makes introducing policies to reduce, or mitigate, emissions in democracies difficult.

Mitigation policies require leaders to expend short-term political capital for long-term economic and environmental gains. However, populists have shown a particularly strong disinterest for doing so, particularly if those short-term costs would affect their prioritized group of the people.

Perhaps the clearest example of this is President Donald Trump’s unwinding of the Clean Power Plan. It may bring short-term benefits to his base, which includes coal miners and related interests, but it is not aligned with long-term energy market trends in the U.S. toward natural gas, wind and solar for generating electricity and away from coal.

Presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro holds a little girl as he poses for photos with supporters during the National Social Liberal Party convention where he accepted the party's nomination in July in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo: Leo Correa / Associated Press
Presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro holds a little girl as he poses for photos with supporters during the National Social Liberal Party convention where he accepted the party’s nomination in July in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo: Leo Correa / Associated Press

Resistant to Global Pressure

Secondly, as several country-level case studies have shown, developing policies to reduce national emissions is often a top-down and elite-driven activity. This is particularly true in high-emitting middle-income democracies like Mexico or Indonesia. In these countries, mitigation policies, like carbon taxes, have not emerged by way of large scale social movements but by top-down policy processes supported by international donors and nongovernment actors. In these countries, climate mitigation is at risk of being overridden by policies with more popular appeal.

In a forthcoming paper on Mexico, a colleague and I investigate incoming President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s (AMLO’s) mitigation policy. The AMLO administration has publicly committed to reduce emissions through a little-known set of carbon pricing policies, while at the same time responding to a popular demand to reduce fuel prices by increasing domestic oil refining. In the contest between the top-down mitigation policy and the widespread popular demands for low gasoline prices, it is likely that the latter will take priority.

A third issue relates to the international governance of climate mitigation. Under the Paris Agreement, governments are asked to progressively ratchet up their emission reduction goals. This mechanism assumes political leaders will respond to international pressure to increase their ambition. However, populist nationalists have shown that they are not motivated by international reactions to their climate policies.

Take Indonesian President Joko Widodo, for instance, who was elected into office in 2014. As I have described elsewhere, one of his first moves in office was to shut down a USD$1 billion mitigation policy program funded by the Norwegian government. This decision to close the agency breached the bilateral agreement between Indonesia and Norway, and points to the disregard shown by some of these leaders to international political pressure.

As these short anecdotes suggest, the mechanism by which populist nationalists hold and retain political power makes it difficult to introduce climate mitigation policies. Their interest is to prioritize short-term programs which favor their select group of the people, rather than longer-term mitigating policies which have widespread economic and environmental benefits. Also, because they don’t comply with traditional norms of international relations, it will not be possible to coerce this group into meeting the Paris Agreement goals.

However, there are some ways countries that want to make reach consensus on global climate policies can better engage these leaders.

Donald Trump campaigns before the 2016 US presidential election. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Donald Trump campaigns before the 2016 US presidential election. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Ways to Engage

As a starting point, it is important to emphasize the short-term benefits of climate mitigation policy to populists.

I believe policymakers and advocates would be well-served in drawing attention to how clean energy may bring multiple short-term benefits to the people on whose support these leaders rely, including lowering domestic air pollution, low cost energy, improved health outcomes and less reliance on foreign fuel imports. Indeed on some of these points, Bolsonaro, has recently said that he will increase the country’s hydropower and nuclear capacity.

Further, recent research suggests the cultural dimension of populist nationalism is of central importance. Rather than reducing emissions and tackling global climate change, it may be better to frame mitigation as part of a large-scale effort towards modernization; that is, modernizing energy systems, transportation systems and infrastructure. A narrative built around modernization, highlighting the economic and societal benefits for all, may resonate more with the disaffected middle classes who have led the rise of populist nationalism.

At the international level too there may be some approaches to ensuring the international governance regime continues in the face of this current wave of populist nationalism. As scholars David Victor and Bruce Jones have recently argued, it may be useful to form small groups – or clubs – of countries which share similar interests to focus on clean technology and policy innovation. Focusing on shared interests within small clubs may work better than trying to push populist nationalists to comply with broad international agreements.

Populist nationalist leaders, like Bolsonaro, are the consequence of deeply entrenched economic, political and cultural shifts that have occurred in democracies over decades. These leaders, in other words, are likely to be a feature of democratic politics for some time into the future.

To continue to make progress on global climate agreements, I think it’s crucial that negotiating countries meet national populist leaders on their own terms for ongoing attempts to save the climate.

The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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