[video:https://vimeo.com/155172742]
Part 1. Negotiations
[video:https://vimeo.com/155172739]
Part 2. Developing countries
[video:https://vimeo.com/155172737]
Part 3. Business
[video:https://vimeo.com/155172736]
Part 4. Career tips from COP21 participants
[video:https://vimeo.com/155172741]
- Alexis Gazzo, Partner at Ernst & Young, Cleantech & Sustainability services: “China has become a leader for renewable energy technology and products”, and is “standard setter in the electricity grid market”
- Jonathan Grant, Director at PwC, Sustainability & Climate Change: “You need to have a major revolution in all sectors in all countries every decade to 2050 and beyond”
- Rachel Kyte, CEO of Sustainable Energy for All (former Vice President of the World Bank Group and Special Envoy for Climate Change): “It costs more in relief than it does to invest in resilience”
- Balgis Osman-Elasha, Climate Change Expert at the Compliance and Safe Guards Division of the African Development Bank: “The experience of China: we need to learn from it” “We don’t want to follow the same trajectory”.
- Joël Pain, Executive Director at Ernst & Young - EMEIA Sustainable Finance Leader: “You can set up new businesses on these new bases”
- Fran Pavley, California Senator representing California's 27th State Senate district: “There are many parts in California where the city’s economy is based on oil: the taxes they get it from oil, the jobs are from oil”
- Clifford Rechtschaffen, Senior advisor for California Governor J. Brown, working on climate, energy, and environmental issues: “California can reach out with our counterparts even if national governments are not taking proactive action”.
- John Roome, Senior Director the World Bank Group's Climate Change Global Practice: “Using modern technology you can get a very good sense at very low cost as to what assets and communities are exposed to various risks”.
- Bambang Susantono, Vice-President for Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development at the Asian Development Bank: “We need local champions that on the ground make things happen”




















