UN Reports Benefits of Investing In 'Green Economy'
Investing In 'Green Economy' Can Boost Growth, Reduce
Poverty -- UN Report
New York, Feb 21 2011
12:10PM
Investing around $1.3 trillion -- or two per cent
of global gross domestic product (GDP) -- into ten key
sectors can kick-start a transition towards a low-carbon,
resource-efficient 'green economy' that can also help reduce
poverty, says a new United Nations report launched today.
The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) presented the report, "Towards a Green Economy: Pathways to Sustainable Development and Poverty Eradication," to environment ministers from over 100 countries at the opening of the UNEP Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum in Nairobi.
The It sees a
gre "With 2.5 billion people living on less than $2 a day and
with more than two billion people being added to the global
population by 2050, it is clear that we must continue to
develop and grow our economies," said UNEP Executive
Director Achim Steiner.
"But this development cannot come
at the expense of the very life support systems on land, in
the oceans or in our atmosphere that sustain our economies,
and thus, the lives of each and everyone of us," he added.
"The green economy provides a vital part of the answer of
how to keep humanity's ecological footprint within planetary
boundaries. It aims to link the environmental imperatives
for changing course to economic and social outcomes -- in
particular econom According to UNEP, the world currently spends between one
and two per cent of global GDP on a range of subsidies that
often perpetuate unsustainable resources use in areas such
as fossil fuels, agriculture, including pesticide subsidies,
water and fisheries. Many of these are contributing to
environmental damage and inefficiencies in the global
economy, and phasing them down or phasing them out would
generate multiple benefits while freeing up resources to
finance a green economy transition. The report does
acknowledge that in the short-term, job losses in some
sectors, such as fisheries, are inevitable if they are to
transition towards sustainability. Investment, in some cases
funded from cuts in harmful subsidies, will be required to
re-skill and re-train some sections of the global workforce
to ensure a fair and socially acceptable transition. The
report makes the case that over time the number of "new and
decent jobs created" in sectors --ranging from renewable
energies to more sustainable agriculture -- will however
offset those lost from the former "brown economy." The
green economy, in the context of sustainable development and
poverty eradication, and international environment
governance are the two themes for UNEP's Governing Council
session, which is also looking ahead to the UN Conference on
Sustainable Development scheduled to be held in Rio de
Janeiro in June 2012. "We live in some of the most
challenging times that perhaps any generation has faced, but
also one of the most exciting moments where the
possibilities of re-shaping and re-focusing towards a
sustainable 21st century have never been more tangible," Mr.
Steiner noted in his ENDS
en economy as not only relevant to more developed
economies but as a key catalyst for growth and poverty
eradication in developing ones too, where in some cases
close to 90 per cent of the GDP of the poor is linked to
nature or natural capital such as forests and freshwaters.
ic development, jobs and equity."