U.N. urges G20 leaders to back "Green New Deal"
By Daniel Wallis
NAIROBI (Reuters) - World leaders meeting in London in April should
kick-start a "Green New Deal" to fight climate change and revive the
crippled global economy on a sustainable basis, a major U.N. environment
meeting was told on Monday.
High on the agenda for more than 100 environment ministers gathered in Kenya
this week will be how to draw attention to "green" issues amid job losses
and worldwide financial turmoil.
The U.N. Environment Program (UNEP) says political efforts to curb
pollution, protect forests and avert global warming have failed, and the
world needs to learn from U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt's response to
the Great Depression.
"We face the unprecedented reality that climate change may very well be the
more important economic development than what happens on Wall Street or the
financial markets, or in our industries," UNEP executive director Achim
Steiner told the start of the February 16-20 meeting.
"The question truly is, can the environment afford to be put on the waiting
line, or is it indeed part of the solution?"
A U.N. report presented on Monday at the conference in Nairobi called on G20
leaders to consider proposals for a "Green New Deal," and develop framework
ideas toward securing a global climate change agreement at talks in
Copenhagen in December.
U.N. climate scientists says rising greenhouse gas concentrations -- which
are up by about a third since the Industrial Revolution -- are stoking
warming likely to cause floods, droughts, heatwaves, rising seas and
extinctions.
More than 190 nations have agreed to negotiate a new global deal by the end
of 2009 to succeed the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol, which sets carbon dioxide
limits for 37 industrialized nations.
Steiner said huge banking bailouts had been mobilized in weeks, but the
response to climate change had been lethargic.
"We must ensure that trillions of dollars are not spent by this generation
to save its economy of today, without any answers as to what the next
generation, that has to repay the debt ... will do in terms of jobs for
tomorrow," he said.
In a speech read on his behalf, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the
world was reeling from multiple crises, and people were worried about food
security, jobs and their savings. An "environmental thread" ran through the
story, he said.
Soaring food prices last year had brought intense focus not just on
agriculture and trade issues, but on the inflationary role of biofuel
production, Ban said.
"Wildly fluctuating crude oil costs illustrated once again our dependence on
the fossil fuels that are causing climate change and the short-sighted
economic vision that has precipitated the current financial turmoil," he
said. (Editing by David Clarke)
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