| Climate Change Rises On World Bank Agenda 
    US: April 11, 2008
 
 
 WASHINGTON - Climate change is now one of the World Bank's top concerns 
    because of its expected impact on health and economic growth in developing 
    countries, the bank's lead environmental economist said.
 
 
 Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia are where global warming's damage 
    will disproportionately be felt, and that makes it a key issue for the World 
    Bank and other financial institutions aiming to foster development, said 
    Kirk Hamilton, co-author of the Global Monitoring Report.
 
 The environmental damage is happening now in the world's poorest places and 
    is likely to be exacerbated as the planet warms, with strong consequences as 
    soon as 2020, Hamilton said in a telephone interview.
 
 "I think there's some risk, not just at the World Bank but globally, that 
    some people might think that climate change is flavor of the month but ... 
    we see these deep connections to development," he said.
 
 The bank's shift to considering climate change as an essential factor in 
    calculating development needs has come in the past two years amid bleak 
    predictions from the Stern Commission Report and the UN Intergovernmental 
    Panel on Climate Change.
 
 "Scientists are telling us that there are high degrees of confidence that 
    what we're observing is human-induced climate change and that 
    business-as-usual scenarios in terms of emissions of greenhouse gases are 
    leading us into dangerous territory," Hamilton said.
 
 
 POOR COUNTRIES TO SUFFER MOST
 
 The Global Monitoring Report, released in advance of weekend meetings of the 
    World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in Washington, contains two 
    meaty chapters on global environmental sustainability.
 
 "Poor countries will suffer the most from, and are able to adapt the least 
    to, the effects of climate change," one environmental chapter said. "For 
    developing countries, the best way to adapt to climate change is to promote 
    inclusive development."
 
 Developing and low-income countries are far more dependent on natural 
    resources than rich countries, with some 40 percent of their national wealth 
    depending on these resources, Hamilton said.
 
 But exploiting these resources without making sure they can be sustained is 
    no path toward development, he added.
 
 "If these resources are degraded, depleted, polluted, then the 
    sustainability of what we're trying to achieve ... is in question," he said.
 
 That includes agriculture.
 
 "If you're mining the fertility of the soil in order to feed people then 
    you're not going to be able to do that forever," Hamilton said.
 
 He took issue with recent criticism of the World Bank's role in financing 
    parts of the fight against climate change. Critics at an international 
    meeting in Bangkok suggested the World Bank aimed to seize control of the 
    billions of dollars in aid to tackle the problem in the coming decades.
 
 Given the vast amounts of money required -- as much as $67 billion just to 
    help the world adapt to climate change by 2030 -- Hamilton said the World 
    Bank should be involved, as well as agencies of the United Nations and 
    individual governments.
 
 "I guess I would argue a bit with those sorts of arguments that say 'What is 
    the bank doing in here?'" he said. "We're in the development business and 
    adapting to climate change is going to be about good development."
 
 (Editing by John O'Callaghan)
 
 
 Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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