"Global
Green New Deal" - Environmentally-Focused
Investment Historic Opportunity for 21st
Century Prosperity and Job Generation
UNEP Launches Green
Economy Initiative to Get the Global Markets
Back to Work
London/Nairobi, 22 October
2008 - Mobilizing and re-focusing the global
economy towards investments in clean technologies
and 'natural' infrastructure such as forests
and soils is the best bet for real growth,
combating climate change and triggering
an employment boom in the 21st century.
The call was made today
by the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) and leading economists as they launched
the Green Economy Initiative aimed at seizing
an historic opportunity to bring about tomorrow's
economy today.
Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary
General and UNEP Executive Director, said:
"The financial, fuel and food crises
of 2008 are in part a result of speculation
and a failure of governments to intelligently
manage and focus markets".
"But they are also
part of a wider market failure triggering
ever deeper and disturbing losses of natural
capital and nature-based assets coupled
with an over-reliance of finite, often subsidized
fossil fuels," he said.
"The flip side
of the coin is the enormous economic, social
and environmental benefits likely to arise
from combating climate change and re-investing
in natural infrastructure - benefits ranging
from new green jobs in clean tech and clean
energy businesses up to ones in sustainable
agriculture and conservation-based enterprises,"
he added.
Mr Steiner said there
was a crucial and urgent need to bring creative,
forward-looking and 'transformational thinking'
into next month's Financing for Development
Review Conference-taking place in Doha,Qatar.
Other critical dates
rapidly coming up in the international calendar
include a proposed financial crisis summit
of the G8+5, called for by French President
Nicolas Sarkozy and the next round of UN
climate convention negotiations in Poznan,
Poland in December.
"Transformative
ideas need to be discussed and transformative
decisions taken. The alternative is more
boom and bust cycles; a climate-stressed
world and a collapse of fish stocks and
fertile soils up to forest ecosystems -
vast, natural 'utilities' that for a fraction
of the cost of machines store water and
carbon, stabilize soils; sustain indigenous
and rural livelihoods and harbor genetic
resources to the value of trillions of dollars
a year," said Mr Steiner.
Hilary Benn, Secretary
of State for the Department for Environment,
Food and Rural Affairs, who held the launch,
said, "The green technological revolution
needs to gather pace, as more and more of
the worlds jobs will in future be in environmental
industries. Britain is committed to building
a green economy at home and abroad: it will
be good for business good for the environment
and good for development. UNEP's initiative
will help make this change; in particular
by helping us to understand just how much
we depend on the environment - soil, air,
water and biodiversity - for our very existence."
Current Economic Models:
Short-Changing People and the Planet
Pavan Sukdhev, a senior
banker from Deutsche Bank who is seconded
to UNEP to lead the research, said:"The
economic models of the 20th century are
now hitting the limits of what is possible
- possible in terms of delivering better
livelihoods for the 2.6 billion people still
living on less than $2 a day and possible
in terms of our ecological footprint".
"Investments will
soon be pouring back into the global economy
- the question is whether they go into the
old, extractive, short-term economy of yesterday
or a new green economy that will deal with
multiple challenges while generating multiple
economic opportunities for the poor and
the well-off alike," he said.
The new report aims
to help governments make better choices
and send the right market signals to investors,
entrepreneurs and consumers world-wide so
"we move from mining the planet to
managing and re-investing in it," said
Mr Steiner.
The Green Economy Initiative,
which has close to $4 million-worth of funding
from the European Commission, Germany and
Norway, builds in part on a request by the
G8+5 group of nations two years ago.
The G8+5 study on the
Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity
(TEEB), also led by Mr Sukhdev and funded
by the European Commission and Germany,
reported its Phase I findings in May at
the UNEP-linked Convention on Biological
Diversity meeting in Bonn.
It highlighted the economic
magnitude of "business - as-usual"
losses, and drew strong links between ecosystem
& biodiversity losses and the persistence
of poverty.
The Green Economy initiative
has three pillars - valuing and mainstreaming
nature's services into national and international
accounts; employment generation through
green jobs and the laying out the policies;
instruments and market signals able to accelerate
a transition to a Green Economy.
The strategy builds
on the findings of TEEB while also linking
with the Green Jobs Initiative of UNEP,
the International Labour Organisation, the
International Trades Union Confederation
and the International Organization of Employers.
The Green Economy Initiative
will draw on the existing and considerable
body of work generated by UNEP, the UN-system
and others ranging from the impacts and
opportunities of shifting fish, fuel and
other subsidies up to innovative market
mechanisms and financial products already
triggering a transition.
In 18 to 24 months it
should deliver for governments - North and
South - a comprehensive assessment and tool
kit for making the necessary transition.
Erik Solheim, the Norwegian
Environment Minister, said:" There
are moments in history when an idea's time
has come - this is the case for a comprehensive
Green Economy Initiative. Norway is delighted
to be supporting this UNEP initiative. Innovative
approaches and actions are needed in this
very complex situation with a fundamental
environmental crisis topped by an international
financial situation out of control".
"I commend UNEP
for responding so fast and timely -in particular
how UNEP together with International Labour
Organization (ILO) have demonstrated the
huge untapped job potential in sustainable
management of natural capital and nature
based assets," he added.
Five Priority Sectors
Underpinning a Global Green New Deal
The five sectors likely
to generate the biggest transition in terms
of economic returns; environmental sustainability
and job creation are:-
Clean energy and clean
technologies including recycling
Rural energy, including renewables and sustainable
biomass
Sustainable agriculture, including organic
agriculture
Ecosystem Infrastructure
Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and
Forest Degradation (REDD)
Sustainable cities including planning, transportation
and green building
Notes to Editors
Economic Mismatch
Global economic growth
over the past 50 years has been accompanied
by accelerated environmental decline.
From 1981 to 2005, the global GDP more than
doubled, in contrast to the 60% of the world's
ecosystems being degraded or used in an
unsustainable manner.
Only a fraction of national
income is spent on the environment. The
global annual spending on the environment
is estimated at best at US$10 billion per
year.
This is in contrast
to the US$60-90 billion needed for those
environmental investments that contribute
directly to poverty reduction alone.
Misaligned incentives
work against the environment. Global agricultural
subsidies amount to more than US$300 billion
a year, but there is a lack of funds for
reforestation.
Global energy subsidies
range from US$240 billion to US$310 billion
per year or around 0.7 per cent of global
GDP, but there is inadequate support for
renewable energy development.
A recent assessment
by UNEP also concluded that a dramatic phasing-out
of fossil fuel subsidies could cut greenhouse
gas emissions by some six per cent by boosting
energy efficiency.
Meanwhile the same assessment
concluded that fossil fuel subsidies, often
justified as an anti-poverty measure, rarely
benefit the urban and especially the rural
poor but tend to benefit fossil fuel companies;
equipment suppliers and the middle class
and well off in an economy.
The global automobile
industry generates some $1.9 trillion in
revenues but employs just 4.4 million people.
The global steel industry
is a $500 billion income earner but employs
4.5 million people
The world's 100,000
National Parks and protected areas generate
wealth via nature-based good and services
equal to around $5 trillion but only employ
1.5 million people.
"Here you have
some of the choices in a nutshell. If we
are to lift 2.6 billion people living on
less than $2 a day out of poverty, do we
put them into making more and more motor
cars, TV's and PC's, or do we invest in
the protected area network and develop its
potential for green and decent new jobs
?," said Mr Sukhdev.
"An additional
investment of $ 50 billion a year in around
100,000 conservation areas worldwide could
secure the $5 trillion-worth of services
provided by these natural assets while generating
millions of new jobs and securing livelihoods
for rural and indigenous peoples."
Clean Energy and Clean
Tech-not starting from ground zero
Greenhouse gas emissions
need to be cut by 80 per cent and finite
natural resources from fossil fuels to metals
need to be more efficiently used and re-used.
UNEP's Sustainable Energy
Finance Initiative renewable energy investments
rose to $160 billion in 2007, up from $100
billion in 2006.
Norway announced this
month that it intends to double its national
research fund for renewables to $3.4 billion.
This year the UK announced
a $100 billion investment to build 4,000
onshore and 3,000 offshore wind turbines
by 2020-while creating some 160,000 jobs.
The global market for
environmental products and services currently
runs at around $1,370 billion or $1,000
billon Euro according to German consultants
Roland Berger.
The market in 2020 could
double to $2,1000 billon or Euro 2,200 billion.
Some 50 countries including
a dozen developing countries, have set renewable
energy targets including Mexico; Argentina,
Brazil, Dominican Republic, China, India,
the Philippines, Iran, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia,
Senegal, South Africa and Uganda.
Globally some 300,000
people are employed in wind power and maybe
170,000 in solar. Over 600,000 are employed
in solar thermal-most of these in China.
Nearly 1.2 million are
employed in biomass energy in four countries-Brazil,
USA, Germany and China.
Overall 2.3 million
are employed in renewable energy sector-a
conservative figure.
Kleiner Perkins, the
venture capital firm that supported the
establishment of Google, Netscape and Amazon.com,
recently directed $100 million to new companies
working on lowering C02 emissions.
Clean Tech investment
in China will totaled an estimated $580
in 2007 million and is likely to total more
than $720 million in 2008
A shift towards renewable
energy and clean technologies is already
underway.
This is as a result
of the existing UN climate change agreements
and in the anticipation of a deep and decisive
new deal in Copenhagen in late 2009 that
will better price carbon
Numerous shining examples
exist on how to accelerate a transition
to a low or even zero carbon economy including
feed-in tariffs such as those that were
introduced a few years ago in Germany.
The German renewable
sector, for example, now already generates
$240 billion in annual revenue, employs
250,000 people, and is expected to provide
more jobs than the country's auto industry
by 2020.
Rural Energy-not starting
from ground zero
Two billion people globally
do not yet have electricity, oil or gas
to cook food and for daily living.
This perpetuates the
poverty trap and undermines attempts to
achieve the UN Millennium Development Goals
while putting pressure on economically-important
ecosystems such as forests for fuel-wood
and charcoal.
It is a crisis but also
an opportunity including a business one
given the potential size of the market for
alternative energy systems
The Clean Development
Mechanism of the UN's Kyoto Protocol is
starting to reach some of the smaller developing
economies.
This is in part as a
result of initiatives including the UN's
Nairobi Framework of 2006 that is building
the capacity of countries in, for example
sub-Saharan Africa, to access the mechanism.
Other measures have
included awareness-raising among banks and
industry players on the Continent to new
green finance opportunities.
The main countries benefiting
to date have been the rapidly developing
economies such as China, Brazil, India and
South Africa.
CDM starting to take-off
in smaller developing countries
The new figures for
Africa, compiled by UNEP Risoe Centre in
Denmark, indicate that this is changing
with the first CDM projects emerging over
the past 18 months in six countries - the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC);
Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Mali
and Senegal.
These include an oil
well, gas flare reduction project in the
DRC and a run-of river hydroelectric project
in Madagascar.
In Kenya new projects
include a 35MW extension of geothermal,
hot rocks, generation and a sugar cane waste-into-energy
project with Mumias Sugar Company.
The total of CDM projects
in Africa still remains low compared to
a global tally of close to 3,500 CDM projects,
but does mark a departure from the very
low levels of the past.
Assuming governments
agree on a deep and decisive new climate
agreement in 2009, Africa overall could
see roughly 230 projects by 2012.
These could cumulatively
generate over 65 million certified emission
reductions, worth close to one billion US
dollars at a conservative carbon credit
price of $15.
Other measures might
include different risk assessment by developed
countries; the us weather derivatives and
other insurance-linked products are being
piloted and bundling numerous smaller projects
including cross border ones together, to
make them more attractive to investors.
For example the UNEP Solar and Wind Energy
Resources assessment has mapped more than
2,000 MW of wind energy potential n Ghana,
mainly along the border with Togo.
CDM projects that reflect
the transport, heating and cooling and industrial
emissions from developing country urban
areas could also be a way forward and contribute
to greening cities.
Feed-in tariffs and
tax changes, such as VAT on clean energy
and energy saving products, may assist rural
electrification.
Other smart instruments
include micro-credit schemes and buying
down the interest on loans.
UNEP has worked with
two banks in India to reduce the cost of
solar loans in rural areas from 12 per cent
to five and then two per cent. 100,000 people
were able to afford solar power. The project
is now self-financing.
Similar initiatives
have kick-started the solar water heating
market in Tunisia. In Mexico, UNEP is working
with UNDP on a Global Environment Facility
project with similar aims.
The programme will cooperate
with Mexico's National Solar Water Heater
Program (known as PROCALSOL) to develop
a supportive regulatory environment and
to assist in building the market demand
and the supply chain for solar water heaters.
The aim is to reach
the total capacity of 2,500,000 cubic metres
of installed systems in Mexico by the end
of 2011.
It also aims to support
continuing sustainable growth of the market
beyond the project's life in order to reach
the target to 23.5 million cubic metres
of installed capacity by 2020.
This has been estimated
to correspond to an estimated cumulative
greenhouse gas reduction potential of over
27 million tons of CO2 by 2020.
By 2020, Mexico might
have the potential to generate jobs for
some 150,000 people in this sector as a
result of the new project.
Sustainable Agriculture-not
starting from ground zero
Agriculture remains
a major employer in the world, providing
jobs to about 40% of the total world labour
force.
The Global Green New
Deal should include a major international
program. This should be led by the Food
and Agriculture Organisation, to provide
long-term support for investing in land
restoration, soil and water conservation,
integrated pest management, organic production,
infrastructure development, extension services,
and market support in the developing world.
Organic agriculture
triggers very polarized views, seen by some
as the saviour and others as a niche, even
luxury product unable to meet the needs
of billions of people.
Studies indicate that
organic agriculture in both the North and
the South employees more people. But what
of the wider benefits?
A new survey by the
UN Conference on Trade and the Environment
and UNEP in East Africa found that over
90 per cent of studies show that organic
or near organic agriculture had benefits
for soil fertility; water control; improved
water tables, carbon sequestration and biodiversity.
This allows farmers
to extend the growing season in marginal
areas. The research in East Africa was among
1.6 million organic or near organic farmers
from seven countries working on 1.4 million
hectares.
Other findings include
an increase in crop yields of 128 per cent
since switching.
Higher incomes too as
a result of not having to buy fertilizers
and pesticides; more food availability;
higher prices paid through certification
schemes for both export and domestic markets-addresses
poverty in environmentally friendly way.
Close to 90 per cent
of cases showed increase in farm and household
incomes and because organic agriculture
is more knowledge intensive it has lead
to improvements in education; community
bonds and cooperation on market access.
The report concludes:" Organic and
near-organic agricultural methods and technologies
are ideally suited for many poor, marginalized
smallholder farmers in Africa, as they require
minimal or no external inputs, use locally
and naturally available materials to produce
high-quality products, and encourage a whole
systemic approach to farming that is more
diverse and resistant to stress".
R+D: A perennial challenge
Governments also need
to consider stepping up research into perennial
crops. Experts suggest that 'moving back
to the future' to these kinds of multi-year
crops with deep roots can also boost soil
fertility and stability 50-fold while assisting
in adapting to climate change
Perennial crops are
also 50 per cent better at carbon capture
and storage than their annual cousins, according
to some estimates.
Because they do not
need to be planted every year, they use
less farm machinery and require fewer inputs
- reducing greenhouse gas emissions further.
Environment Infrastructure
Investments and REDD - not starting from
ground zero
Over the past 300 years,
the global forest area has shrunk by around
40 per cent; half the globe's wetlands have
been lost since 1900 and human - led species
extinction rates are now 1,000 higher than
the 'natural' rate of extinction.
Some 60 per cent of
the Earth's ecosystems and the goods and
services they provide are now degraded.
Losses of natural areas
between 2000 and 2050 are projected to be
7.5 million square km, roughly the size
of Australia, if existing economic models
continue unfocused and undirected.
The economic losses
have recently been emerging. For example
in the Caribbean, tourism losses linked
with an 80 per cent decline in coral reefs
are set to rise to $300 million a year.
Some Estimates of Returns
on Natural Infrastructure Investments
An annual investment
of $45 billion could conserve services from
protected area ecosystems which deliver
an estimated $5 trillion a year-a good cost
benefit ration of 100:1.
Coral reefs, whose fishery,
tourism and flood protection services are
estimated at between $100,000 and $600,000
per square km, could be conserved for an
investment of close to $780 per square km
or 0.2 per cent of the value of the ecosystem
protected.
Deforestation contributes
close to 20 per cent of global greenhouse
gas emissions-$17 billion to over $30 billion
annually could halve this while securing
livelihoods and boosting conservation-related
employment in tropical countries.
A global marine protected
area network, involving the closure of 20
per cent of total fishing grounds could
result in profit losses of an estimated
$270 million annually.
But could sustain fisheries
worth $80-100 billion a year; assist in
conserving an estimated 27 million jobs
while generating one million new ones and
protect food supplies for over one billion
people, especially in developing countries
whose main or sole source of animal protein
comes from fish..
Emerging Public and
Private Natural Infrastructure Instruments
Under the UN climate
convention for Reduced Emissions from Deforestation
and Forest Degradation (REDD) to be included
in a post-2012 deal up to payments for ecosystem
services.
Norway for example has
pledged close to $3 billion for REDD; Costa
Rica has invested around $200 million in
protection of forests for ecosystem services
and Mexico is paying 1.5 million rural people
to manage forests and watersheds.
The United States spends
more than $1.7 billion a year in direct
payments to farmers for environmental protection.
The European Union promotes
environmentally-friendly agriculture and
forestry under its Euro 4.5 billion Rural
Development programmes.
New instruments are
emerging such as habitat and 'bio-banking'.
In the United States, companies and individuals
can buy wetland mitigation banks. Trade
in wetland bank credits reached around $350
million in 2006.
'Endangered species
credits' are being generated by a biodiversity
cap-and-trade system, also in the United
States. The market volume has been around
$40 million with over 44,000 hectares of
endangered species habitat protected.
A similar scheme, created
through the BioBanking Bill of 2006, has
been piloted in New South Wales, Australia.
Certification schemes
involving consumers and companies are also
becoming more creative. In South Africa's
Cape Floral Kingdom, a biodiversity hot
spot, wine producers who commit 10 per cent
of their vineyard to conservation can use
a special label.
The market for sustainably
produced commodities could reach $60 billion
by 2010.
There is an urgent need
for governments to promote a sharp increase
in financial flows via creative market mechanisms
and smart instruments that reward those
investing in rather than degrading nature-based
assets.
Sustainable cities-not
starting from ground zero
Huge opportunities exist for cutting greenhouse
gas emissions and generating employment.
In some countries the built environment
is responsible for up to 40% of total energy
use.
A worldwide transition
to energy-efficient buildings would create
millions of jobs, as well as "greening"
existing employment for many of the estimated
111 million people already working in the
construction sector.
Investments in improved
energy efficiency in buildings could generate
an additional 2-3.5 million green jobs in
Europe and the United States alone, with
the potential much higher in developing
countries.
Several cities are now
developing sustainable transport projects
including Bus Rapid Transport schemes.
In Mexico City BRT schemes
alongside cycle-ways and new traffic measures,
envisage a 10 per cent cut in transport-related
smog and fine air particles and average
annual benefits of over $1000 million.
The Marikina bikeway
project, which is focusing on safe cycle
ways in Manila, Philippines, plans to double
the share of journeys by pedal power by
2015. It is estimated that for every dollar
of the around $2 million invested there
will be a two dollar return in health and
wider environmental benefits.
Such projects are also
helping to boost the incomes of local, often
poor, people according to the new analysis
by the World Bank which is one of the implementing
agencies of Global Environment Facility-funded
initiatives.
In Lima, Peru use of
bicycles twice a day results in per capita
savings of up to $7.60 per month. The amount
of money saved is equivalent to just under
10 per cent of a Lima resident's monthly
energy bill.
Better use of information
technology, demand management and planning
and market instruments are also forming
part of such schemes.
For example, housing
and employment should be focused along transit
hubs so as to shorten journeys to buses
and cycle ways. Congestion charging, parking
fees and tax credit for more efficient forms
of transport may also be a boon.
Finally, simple measures
like ensuring buses and vehicles are properly
maintained and serviced can deliver significant
benefits in terms of greenhouse gas emissions
and local air quality.
"In Rio de Janeiro,
improved operation of diesel buses has shown
to result in annual savings of 40 million
liters of fuel - a 12.5 per cent reduction
- averting 107,800 tonnes of carbon dioxide
emissions per year."
Nick Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson and Head
of Media
Young People Urge World
Leaders to Combat Climate Change
New York, 23 October
2008 - Nearly 90 per cent of young people
across the globe think world leaders should
do "whatever it takes" to tackle
climate change. This is among the top findings
of a new poll conducted on behalf of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
The survey of 12 to
18 year-olds in five countries (Brazil,
India, Russia, South Africa and the United
States) found that nine in ten young people
(88% overall and 85% or more in each country)
agree that "World leaders should do
whatever it takes to tackle climate change".
Climate Change a Top
Concern among Young People
Young people are clearly
concerned about climate change. Concern
is highest in Brazil (96%) and South Africa
(91%), followed by India (85%) and the United
States (82%), while significantly lower
levels of concern are expressed in Russia
(70%).
World Leaders Not Doing
Enough
Young people in South
Africa, the United States and Brazil are
particularly critical of world leaders'
efforts to address climate change; seven
in ten or more across these three countries
say world leaders are not doing enough (South
Africa, 82%; the United States, 79%; Brazil,
73%). Only in India are young people more
likely to say world leaders are doing "too
much" or "enough;" just 19
percent say they are not doing enough.
Necessary to Take Major
Steps Very Soon
There is a great sense
of urgency among youth in most countries,
with a majority of young people in each
country except India saying, "It is
necessary to take major steps starting very
soon" (Brazil, 88%; South Africa, 81%;
Russia, 75%; the United States, 61%). When
thinking about the human impact on climate
change in India, most young people believe
that modest steps should be taken over the
coming years (53%). This reinforces their
world view that enough is being done on
climate change.