Consultant as ASEAN Trade and Supply Chain Emissions Analyst

Tags: climate change English Environment
  • Added Date: Monday, 31 July 2023
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Program Overview

Launched in early 2014, WRI Indonesia builds on WRIโ€™s global 20-year history in the country and the official establishment of the WRI Indonesia office has strengthened our impact on the ground in recent years. Our current work primarily focuses on agriculture, forest, land use, climate, energy, cities, and the ocean. Within WRI Indonesia, these portfolios are subsumed into two deputies based on terrestrial and non-terrestrial based consisting of 1) AFOLU which covers Agriculture, Forest, and Land Use; and 2) CECO which comprises of Climate, Energy, Cities and the Ocean.

Climate program within WRI focuses on four main areas: stepping up national climate action, advancing international climate action, tracking progress toward climate goals, and supporting equity and development goals in the transition to a zero-carbon economy. Our research evaluates the technical, economic and social benefits of climate action, as well as the costs of inaction. We work with national governments to design ambitious near-term climate plans that align with long-term temperature goals, and help integrate these into economic, sectoral and development plans. We help international policymakers advance climate solutions through negotiations and accords such as the Paris Agreement. We support businesses, civil society, local governments and other non-state actors as they pursue their own emissions-reduction and adaptation goals. We build tools to track global progress on fighting the climate crisis, inform good decision-making and ensure accountability for existing commitments. And we work with thought leaders around the world to accelerate adaptation efforts that will help vulnerable communities build resilience against climate impacts.

The ASEAN-China cooperation mechanism has played an important role in promoting closer political and economic ties between ASEAN member states and China, and has become one of the major fora for regional cooperation. China has retained its position as ASEANโ€™s largest trading partnx`er since 2009. Trade between ASEAN and China has more than doubled since 2010, from USD 235.5 billion to USD 516.9 billion in 2020 (18% of ASEANโ€™s total trade). The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) Agreement that entered into force in January 2022 also include China and six ASEAN member states, namely Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. Considering both China and most of the ASEAN countries have committed to carbon neutrality goals, there are immediate and huge opportunities to leverage these trading partners to accelerate their low-carbon transition by decarbonizing the embedded carbon in their trade flows.

Building on the above, WRI Indonesia in collaboration with WRI Global team and WRI China have set an ambitious target to leverage the strong ASEAN-China cooperation by cutting carbon embedded in their trade flows compared to 2020 levels through ASEAN-China Sustainable Project. The project will have two main components: i) providing ASEAN-China trade related carbon flow data to relevant policymakers in both jurisdictions and attract attention from other stakeholders to jointly take action to cut the said trade-embedded carbon; ii) Encouraging China and ASEAN member states to start developing sustainable trade mechanism to cut embedded carbon and reduce deforestation in the selected trade products.

What You Will Do

Research and Scientific Works (70%)

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