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Africa: Climate Action & Economic Growth
AfricaFocus Bulletin
September 22, 2014 (140922)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
It is still conventional wisdom to pit action to curb climate change
against economic growth. But the evidence is rapidly accumulating that
this is a false dilemma, buttressed by vested interests in the fossil fuel
industry and a simplistic concept of economic growth. According to a
report just released by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate,
falling prices for renewable energy and careful analysis of both costs and
benefits of low-carbon vs. high-carbon investment strategies point to a
clear conclusion: saving the planet and saving the economy go hand in
hand.
Despite urgent calls from demonstrators around the world, from scientists
and more and more influential policy makers, the debate will no doubt
continue. It will take strong political pressure, at multiple levels, as
well as analyses like these, to lead to significant policy change.
Measuring costs and benefits depends on what is counted, on the time frame
for analysis, as well as on the level of public pressure and divestment
from fossil fuel companies.
There are still enormous short-term profits in fossil fuel production, and
"fossil-fuel denialism" still holds sway in policy circles. But it is
becoming harder and harder to deny that the long-term economic logic as
well as the urgent imperative to stop global warming favors their
obsolescence.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains the preface and executive summary of
the report. The full report is available at http://newclimateeconomy.net/
Naomi Klein's new book This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the
Climate, just released last week, presents a powerful challenge to
business as usual, linking the failure to act on the climate to basic
flaws in the logic of market-fundamentalist capitalism (http://www.africafocus.org/books/isbn.php?B00JHIDON6). She also argues
that the threat of climate change can provide a catalyst to bring together
movements challenging this system. (For one review, visit
http://tinyurl.com/q34c4re; for excerpts from the book:
http://tinyurl.com/nhys5yf).
Another important report just released by the Bretton Woods Project shows
that key multilateral development banks say urgent action is needed to
tackle climate change but continue to invest billions of dollars in oil,
gas and coal projects. http://www.brettonwoodsproject.org / direct URL
http://tinyurl.com/nxlul3o
Andrew Breiner, "How Fossil Fuels Make Inequality Worse," ThinkProgress,
Sept. 17, 2014 http://tinyurl.com/nfmp37r
For talking points and previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on Climate Change
and the Environment, visit http://www.africafocus.org/intro-env.php
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The New Climate Economy
The Global Commission on the Economy and Climate
http://newclimateeconomy.net/
Preface
All over the world, people want to achieve better lives for themselves and
for their children. Governments want to secure economic growth, improve
living standards, create jobs and reduce poverty. Businesses want to
expand and become more profitable.
Today we also know that the world must deal with the challenge of climate
change.
Can these aspirations all be met at the same time? Is it possible to
tackle long-term climate change while also, now, promoting economic growth
and development? Or must we choose between our future security and our
current living standards?
It was to provide an objective, independent examination of these questions
that the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate was established in
2013 by a group of seven countries.
Our report is addressed to economic decision-makers across the world in
both public and private sectors. Its core conclusion is that, by shaping
the major processes of structural and technological change now occurring
in the global economy, we can create lasting economic growth while also
tackling the immense risks of climate change. Their diverse perspectives
on the economics of growth, development and structural transformation,
public policy, risk and economic history have guided the project's
intellectual approach.
We are extremely grateful to the governments of Colombia, Ethiopia,
Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom
for their vision and support. They have given us freedom in conducting our
work, and the findings and recommendations in this report are entirely
independent of them.
The Commission is made up of 24 former heads of government and finance
ministers, and leaders of businesses, cities, international organisations,
and research institutions. Their wealth of experience gives confidence
that our research has been grounded in reality, and that the
recommendations of this report can be implemented. The Commission has been
advised by a panel of 15 distinguished economists, all of them world
leaders in their respective economic disciplines. Their diverse
perspectives on the economics of growth, development and structural
transformation, public policy, risk and economic history have guided the
project's intellectual approach.
The research programme has been conducted by a dedicated team, supported
by a partnership of economic and policy research institutions from five
continents. The work has drawn on extensive engagement with economic
decision-makers in governments, states, cities, communities, companies,
trade unions, international organisations and financial institutions
throughout the world. Over 100 organisations have actively contributed to
the work of the Commission through research papers, data, team members,
feedback, advice and support. This report therefore reflects the insights
and experience of many institutions and experts. We are grateful to all of
them.
The issues dealt with in this report could not be more important. Almost
every country today faces difficult economic problems. Climate change
confronts the world as a whole with an unprecedented challenge. The 10-
point Global Action Plan we propose in this report can help catalyse
action to achieve both better growth and a better climate. It proposes
practical measures which can be taken not just by national governments,
but by cities and regional authorities, businesses, communities and
international organisations. The Commission and the New Climate Economy
project remain committed to engaging further with all those interested in
these issues. The need is urgent, for decisions made today and over the
next few years will determine the future course of both economic growth
and climate change. World leaders will come together in 2015 to decide on
new goals for sustainable development and to achieve a new climate
agreement. At home they will continue to make vital economic decisions.
As they do so, we hope they will consider seriously the research and
recommendations presented in this report.
Executive Summary
The Global Commission on the Economy and Climate was set up to examine
whether it is possible to achieve lasting economic growth while also
tackling the risks of climate change.
Its report seeks to inform economic decision-makers in both public and
private sectors, many of whom recognise the serious risks caused by
climate change, but also need to tackle more immediate concerns such as
jobs, competitiveness and poverty. The report brings together evidence and
analysis, learning from the practical experience of countries, cities and
businesses across the world.
The report's conclusion is that countries at all levels of income now have
the opportunity to build lasting economic growth at the same time as
reducing the immense risks of climate change. This is made possible by
structural and technological changes unfolding in the global economy and
opportunities for greater economic efficiency. The capital for the
necessary investments is available, and the potential for innovation is
vast. What is needed is strong political leadership and credible,
consistent policies.
The next 15 years will be critical, as the global economy undergoes a deep
structural transformation. It will not be 'business as usual'. The global
economy will grow by more than half, a billion more people will come to
live in cities, and rapid technological advance will continue to change
businesses and lives. Around US$90 trillion is likely to be invested in
infrastructure in the world's urban, land use and energy systems. How
these changes are managed will shape future patterns of growth,
productivity and living standards.
The next 15 years of investment will also determine the future of the
world's climate system. Climate change caused by past greenhouse gas
emissions is already having serious economic consequences, especially in
more exposed areas of the world. Without stronger action in the next 10-15
years, which leads global emissions to peak and then fall, it is near
certain that global average warming will exceed 2°C, the level the
international community has agreed not to cross. On current trends,
warming could exceed 4°C by the end of the century, with extreme and
potentially irreversible impacts. By building up greenhouse gas
concentrations and locking in the stock of high-carbon assets, delay in
reducing emissions makes it progressively more expensive to shift towards
a low-carbon economy.
Future economic growth does not have to copy the high-carbon, unevenly
distributed model of the past. There is now huge potential to invest in
greater efficiency, structural transformation and technological change in
three key systems of the economy:
- Cities are engines of economic growth. They generate around 80% of
global economic output, and around 70% of global energy use and energyrelated
GHG emissions. How the world's largest and fastest- growing cities
develop will be critical to the future path of the global economy and
climate. But much urban growth today is unplanned and unstructured, with
significant economic, social and environmental costs. As pioneering cities
across the world are demonstrating, more compact and connected urban
development, built around mass public transport, can create cities that
are economically dynamic and healthier, and that have lower emissions.
Such an approach to urbanisation could reduce urban infrastructure capital
requirements by more than US$3 trillion over the next 15 years.
- Land use productivity will determine whether the world can feed a
population projected to grow to over eight billion by 2030, while
sustaining natural environments. Food production can be increased, forests
protected and land use emissions cut by raising crop and livestock
productivity, using new technologies and comprehensive approaches to soil
and water management. Restoring just 12% of the world's degraded
agricultural land could feed 200 million people by 2030, while also
strengthening climate resilience and reducing emissions. Slowing down and
ultimately halting deforestation can be achieved if strong international
support is combined with strong domestic commitment to forest protection
and rural income development.
- Energy systems power growth in all economies. We are on the cusp of a
clean energy future. Coal is riskier and more expensive than it used to
be, with growing import dependence and rising air pollution. Rapidly
falling costs, particularly of wind and solar power, could lead renewable
and other low-carbon energy sources to account for more than half of all
new electricity generation over the next 15 years. Greater investment in
energy efficiency -- in businesses, buildings and transport -- has huge
potential to cut and manage demand. In developing countries,
decentralised renewables can help provide electricity for the more than
one billion people without access.
Across all these systems, three 'drivers of change' need to be harnessed
to overcome market, policy and institutional barriers to low-carbon
growth:
- Raising resource efficiency is at the heart of both growth and emissions
reduction. In many economies, both market and policy failures distort the
efficient allocation of resources while simultaneously increasing
emissions. While subsidies for clean energy amount to around US$100
billion, subsidies to polluting fossil fuels are now estimated at around
US$600 billion per year. Phasing out fossil fuel subsidies can improve
growth and release resources that can be reallocated to benefit people on
low incomes. A strong and predictable price on carbon will drive higher
energy productivity and provide new fiscal revenues, which can be used to
cut other taxes. Well-designed regulations, such as higher performance
standards for appliances and vehicles, are also needed.
- Investment in infrastructure underpins modern economic growth. Lowcarbon
forms of infrastructure are essential to reduce current emissions
trajectories. Yet many economies today are failing to mobilise sufficient
finance to meet their infrastructure needs. This is not due to a shortage
of capital in the global economy. It results, in many countries, from a
lack of public financing capacity and the market perception that
investments are high-risk. Financial innovations, including green bonds,
risk-sharing instruments and products which align the risk profile of lowcarbon
assets with the needs of investors, can reduce financing costs,
potentially by up to 20% for low-carbon electricity. National and
international development banks should be strengthened and expanded.
- Stimulating innovation in technologies, business models and social
practices can drive both growth and emissions reduction. Advances in
digitisation, new materials, life sciences and production processes have
the potential to transform markets and dramatically cut resource
consumption. But technology will not automatically advance in a lowcarbon
direction. It requires clear policy signals, including the
reduction of market and regulatory barriers to new technologies and
business models, and well-targeted public expenditure. To help create the
next wave of resource-efficient, low-carbon technologies, public research
and development (R&D) investment in the energy sector should triple to
well over US$100 billion a year by the mid-2020s.
Well-designed policies in these fields can make growth and climate
objectives mutually reinforcing in both the short and medium term. In the
long term, if climate change is not tackled, growth itself will be at
risk.
Consistent, credible, long-term policy signals are crucial. By shaping
market expectations, such policy encourages greater investment, lowering
the costs of the transition to a low-carbon economy. By contrast, policy
uncertainty in many countries has raised the cost of capital, damaging
investment, jobs and growth. In the long run, there is a significant risk
that high-carbon investments may get devalued or 'stranded' as action to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions is strengthened.
The quality of growth matters, as well as its rate. Many low-carbon
policies deliver multiple other benefits, including greater energy
security, less traffic congestion, improved quality of life, stronger
resilience to climate change and environmental protection. Many can help
reduce poverty. In the 15 countries with the highest greenhouse gas
emissions, the damage to health from poor air quality, largely associated
with the burning of fossil fuels, is valued at an average of over 4% of
GDP. Many countries are now recognising the costs of a high- carbon model
of development.
Managed well, the additional investments in infrastructure needed to make
the transition to a low-carbon economy will be modest. The infrastructure
requirements for a high-carbon economy, across transport, energy, water
systems and cities, are estimated at around US$90 trillion, or an average
of US$6 trillion per year over the next 15 years. By combining renewable
energy with reduced fossil fuel investment, more compact cities, and more
efficiently managed energy demand, low-carbon infrastructure will increase
investment requirements by only an estimated US$270 billion a year. These
higher capital costs could potentially be fully offset by lower operating
costs, for example from reduced expenditure on fuel. Investing in a lowcarbon
economy is a cost-effective form of insurance against climate risk.
The report proposes a 10-point Global Action Plan of key recommendations.
This asks decision-makers to:
- Accelerate low-carbon transformation by integrating climate into core
economic decision-making processes. This is needed at all levels of
government and business, through systematic changes to policy and project
assessment tools, performance indicators, risk models and reporting
requirements.
- Enter into a strong, lasting and equitable international climate
agreement, to increase the confidence needed for domestic policy reform,
provide the support needed by developing countries, and send a strong
market signal to investors.
- Phase out subsidies for fossil fuels and agricultural inputs, and
incentives for urban sprawl, to drive more efficient use of resources and
release public funds for other uses, including programmes to benefit those
on low incomes.
- Introduce strong, predictable carbon prices as part of good fiscal
reform and good business practice, sending strong signals across the
economy.
- Substantially reduce capital costs for low-carbon infrastructure
investments, expanding access to institutional capital and lowering its
costs for low-carbon assets.
- Scale up innovation in key low-carbon and climate-resilient
technologies, tripling public investment in clean energy R&D and removing
barriers to entrepreneurship and creativity.
- Make connected and compact cities the preferred form of urban
development, by encouraging better-managed urban growth and prioritising
investments in efficient and safe mass transit systems.
- Stop deforestation of natural forests by 2030, by strengthening the
incentives for long-term investment and forest protection, and increasing
international funding to around US$5 billion per year, progressively
linked to performance.
- Restore at least 500 million hectares of lost or degraded forests and
agricultural lands by 2030, strengthening rural incomes and food security.
- Accelerate the shift away from polluting coal-fired power generation,
phasing out new unabated coal plants in developed economies immediately
and in middle-income countries by 2025.
The first six recommendations provide the conditions necessary for a
strong and credible framework to foster low-carbon and climate-resilient
investment and growth. The last four point to vital opportunities for
change which can drive future growth and lower climate risk in cities,
land use and energy systems.
Implementation of the policies and investments proposed in this report
could deliver at least half of the reductions in emissions needed by 2030
to lower the risk of dangerous climate change. With strong and broad
implementation, rapid learning and sharing of best practice, this number
could potentially rise to 90%. All the measures would deliver multiple
economic and social benefits, even before considering their benefits to
climate. Further action will also be required. Some of this, such as the
development of carbon capture, use and storage technologies, will have net
costs to be borne solely for the purpose of reducing climate risk. Beyond
2030 net global emissions will need to fall further towards near zero or
below in the second half of the century. But the costs will be much lower
and the opportunities for growth much greater if the foundations of a lowcarbon
economy are laid now.
A strong and equitable international agreement is essential to support
ambitious domestic action. Developed countries will need to show
leadership through their own strong emissions reductions, and by
mobilising financial and technological support for developing countries.
At the same time, developing countries already account for around twothirds
of annual greenhouse gas emissions. Global reductions on the scale
required will therefore not be possible unless all countries play their
part.
The shift towards a low-carbon, climate-resilient path of growth and
development will not be easy, and governments will need to commit to a
just transition. Not all climate policies are win-win, and some trade-offs
are inevitable, particularly in the short term. Although many jobs will be
created, and there will be larger markets and profits for many businesses,
some jobs will also be lost, particularly in high-carbon sectors. The
human and economic costs of the transition should be managed through
support for displaced workers, affected communities and low-income
households. Strong political leadership and the active participation of
civil society will be needed, along with far-sighted, enlightened business
decisions.
The wealth of evidence presented by the report shows that there is now
huge scope for action which can both enhance growth and reduce climate
risk. Leading businesses, cities and countries are showing how this can
be done. The world's economic leaders face a remarkable opportunity to
set the world on the path to sustainable prosperity. The prize is
immense, and the moment of decision is now. We can achieve both better
growth and a better climate.
AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication providing
reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a particular
focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus Bulletin is edited
by William Minter.
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