Energy Innovation: Driving Technology Competition and Cooperation Among the U.S., China, India, and Brazil
from Latin America’s Moment and Latin America Studies Program

Energy Innovation: Driving Technology Competition and Cooperation Among the U.S., China, India, and Brazil

I co-authored a CFR report on low-carbon technology innovation and diffusion in Brazil, China and India with my colleagues Michael Levi, Elizabeth Economy and Adam Segal.

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Energy and Environment

Energy_Innovation_coverlrgI co-authored a CFR report on low-carbon technology innovation and diffusion in Brazil, China and India with my colleagues Michael Levi, Elizabeth Economy and Adam Segal.

The report can be accessed here.

The reports examines how innovation in low-carbon technologies occurs and how the resulting developments are diffused and adopted. It zeros in on a critical tension: the United States’ interests in encouraging the spread of technology to reduce emissions can clash with efforts to strengthen its own economy. This tension has traditionally been the province of debates over “technology transfer” and intellectual property rights; this study goes beyond those debates to look at the complete innovation system.

We begin by exploring each major emerging economy in four different dimensions. First, we examine how efforts to create and manufacture low-carbon technologies do and do not stimulate efforts to deploy those technologies at home. Second, we assess how government policies affect countries’ abilities to absorb technologies, looking at policies that create markets, invest in innovation, protect intellectual property rights (IPR), and affect trade and investment barriers. Third, we examine how the economic structure of each major emerging economy affects the country’s ability to respond to climate change through innovation and foreign technology absorption. Fourth, we examine each country’s ambitions for technology and product exports, which affect the degree to which U.S. commercial interests are helped or hindered by the spread of technology.

The report then assesses a range of policies and offers recommendations. These are aimed at boosting domestic investment in innovation, strengthening active government promotion of technology transfer and diffusion, and promoting an open international system conducive to the commercial spread of technology. Recommendations address IPR, trade and investment rules, government support for research, development and demonstration, standard setting, technology cooperation centers, and multilateral institutions, among other areas.

The study also includes detailed case studies of wind technology in all three countries, clean coal in China and India, electric vehicles in China, solar energy in India, and biofuels and deforestation in Brazil.

More on:

China

Economics

Brazil

Technology and Innovation

Energy and Environment