| UN Says Credit Crisis Could Enable "Green Growth"
INTERNATIONAL: October 13, 2008
UNITED NATIONS - Instead of sidelining the fight against climate change, the
global credit crisis could hasten countries' efforts to create "green
growth" industries by revamping the financial system behind them, the UN
climate chief said on Friday.
But that would depend on governments helping poor countries -- who are key
to saving the planet's ecology -- tackle their problems, instead of spending
most available money on rescuing the financial world, Yvo de Boer told
reporters.
De Boer said the financial "earthquake" that has seen markets plunge
worldwide in recent weeks could damage UN-led climate change talks, but only
"if the opportunities that the crisis brings for climate change abatement
are ignored."
"The credit crisis can be used to make progress in a new direction, an
opportunity for global green economic growth," de Boer, who heads the
Bonn-based UN Climate Change Secretariat, told a news conference.
"The credit crunch I believe is an opportunity to rebuild the financial
system that would underpin sustainable growth ... Governments now have an
opportunity to create and enforce policy which stimulates private
competition to fund clean industry."
De Boer said a successful outcome to climate change negotiations in
Copenhagen in December 2009 would create new markets, investment
opportunities and job creation.
But he warned that "if available global capital is used primarily to refloat
the financial world, we literally will sink the futures of the poorest of
the poor.
"And I hope that the credit crunch will not mean that people in the South
will have to wait for those in the North to have repaid their credit card
debts and mortgages before attention is again turned to the South."
Without reaching out a hand to developing countries, it would be very
difficult to make advances on the rest of the environmental agenda, De Boer
said.
Environment ministers will meet in two months' time in Poznan, Poland, to
prepare for the Copenhagen summit, which is due to agree on a new
global-warming accord to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.
Ministers in Poznan must make clear they were "willing to put financial
resources, the architecture, the institutions in place that will allow
developing countries to engage in a global approach on both mitigation and
adaptation," he said.
Funding did not have to all come from governments and he foresaw "an
approach where we very much use the market".
De Boer said the financial crisis had not so far affected the Kyoto
Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism, which allows rich countries to
offset their carbon footprints by investing in clean energy projects in
developing countries.
"I don't see a slowdown in the CDM pipeline at the moment," he said.
(Editing by Philip Barbara)
Story by Patrick Worsnip
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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