Logo

Tiempo Climate Newswatch

Green Growth in the Asia-Pacific Region



Printer-friendly

Action point

Jim Salinger

Jim Salinger describes his priority for action on global warming. You can play the low bandwidth or the high bandwidth version

More action points...

Featured sites

Plan B, from the Earth Policy Institute, details how to rescue a planet under stress by cutting carbon emissions 80 per cent by 2020.

The e-newsletter from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Secretariat provides a comprehensive overview of major news and announcements regarding the climate negotiations.

The OzoneAction Education Pack provides primary school teachers with practical, hands-on and entertaining curricula material to educate their students about ozone depletion.

The Youth Climate Pledge is a collaborative plan of action that young people can sign on to and get others to commit to.

And finally,

The United Nations Paint for the Planet exhibition features paintings by child artists on the theme of climate change.

More featured sites...

About Newswatch

Tiempo Climate Newswatch is a weekly on-line magazine with news, features and comment on global warming, climate change, sea-level rise and development issues. It is edited by Mick Kelly and Sarah Granich and maintained by Mick Kelly and Mike Salmon. The cartoons are created by Lawrence Moore.

The news stories carried by Newswatch are updated weekly. Comment, features, interviews and other sections of the magazine are updated on a weekly to monthly basis.

Newswatch automatically scans a number of news sites once an hour, searching for a set of keyphrases. The raw news feed can be accessed in standard or PDA format.

Part of the Tiempo Climate Cyberlibrary, Tiempo Climate Newswatch is hosted by the Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia.

The Tiempo Climate Cyberlibrary is a co-production of the Stockholm Environment Institute and the International Institute for Environment and Development, sponsored by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.

While every effort is made to ensure that information on this site, and on other sites that are referenced here, is accurate, no liability for loss or damage resulting from use of this information can be accepted.

Rae Kwon Chung Rae Kwon Chung, on behalf of the Environment and Sustainable Development Division at the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia (ESCAP), outlines an approach to sustainable economic growth that is being promoted for the nations of Asia and the Pacific.
The author is Director of the Environment and Sustainable Development Division.

The Asia Pacific region boasts rapid economic growth, arguably a prerequisite for poverty reduction in a region that hosts nearly two-thirds of the world's poor. The countries of Asia and the Pacific are, however, also characterized by both a high population density and the most limited bio-capacity per capita in the world. It is, therefore, increasingly crucial for the countries of this region to focus on sustainable economic growth.

The region cannot continue with an ecologically inefficient pattern of economic growth if it is to achieve Millennium Development Goal 1, poverty reduction, without compromising Millennium Development Goal 7, environmental sustainability. It is no longer possible for countries in the region to maximize their Gross Domestic Product based solely on a "quantity of growth" paradigm and thereby risk repeating the outdated "grow first, clean-up later" approach of already developed countries.

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission of Asia and the Pacific (UN ESCAP) is promoting a Green Growth approach that aims to improve the ecological efficiency and quality of the region's economic growth.

In order to move towards a Green Growth future, we have to internalize ecological costs into our economic performance and thus maximize resource efficiency and minimize the pollution impact of our production and consumption patterns.

Eco-efficiency is not just an environmental concept, it is a critically-necessary economic condition. The Asia and Pacific region cannot sustain its economic expansion without improving its resource efficiency as the prices of natural resources, such as oil, rapidly rise.

UN ESCAP has identified five specific policy options for the Green Growth approach. They are:

  • eco-tax reform;
  • promotion of sustainable infrastructure;
  • demand-side management;
  • greening of business; and,
  • development of eco-efficiency indicators.

Eco-tax reform would change the tax base from "income" to "pollution", increasing tax on energy consumption while reducing tax on income thus maintaining revenue neutrality. This reform could bring a double dividend of reducing carbon emissions while at the same time promoting growth. Eco-tax reform could then become an important tool for internalizing ecological costs without raising the tax burden on the economy, creating a basis for green economics between climate action and green growth.

Action to tackle the climate problem is not only "the greatest and widest-ranging market failure ever seen," as was pointed out by the Stern Review, but is also a serious failure of ecological efficiency. It is clear that Green Growth, which aims to improve the eco-efficiency of our growth, is, in fact, the ultimate answer to the climate problem.

As the price of oil is now reaching record high levels, energy efficiency, which is a critical component of any response to climate change, is also a key to the energy security that is necessary to sustain the economic growth of the region. Policy tools such as eco-tax reform could start up a virtuous cycle where energy efficiency, energy security, climate action and economic growth are mutually reinforcing each other to positive effect.

If we can make investments in climate actions economically viable, "climate crisis" can be turned into "economic opportunity". If we can properly reform the Clean Development Mechanism under the Kyoto Protocol, so that investment in climate actions can be made commercially viable, then excess capital flowing around the world looking for investment opportunities, mostly in stocks and real estate, will naturally flow to climate actions.

Discounted CERs
Discounting Certified Emission Reductions (CERs)

Source: UN ESCAP

If we can be creative enough to sell only a certain portion of carbon credits from the Clean Development Mechanism (see figure above), then unsold portions will stand as a net global emission reduction. If we can generate such a net global reduction without imposing any target on developing countries, then one of the most serious stumbling blocks in the negotiations for a post-2012 climate change regime will be removed.

Asian and Pacific nations are amongst those which suffer the most from climate change-related disasters. The region cannot shy away from taking proactive climate actions. Climate action is an essential component of Green Growth. UN ESCAP has been leading regional consultations at the Gleneagles Dialogue of the G-8 Summit for a Low Carbon Society and has proposed concrete and innovative policy options and ideas to be reviewed by the member states through policy consultations and publications in international journals.

The nations of the Asia-Pacific region have acknowledged the importance of a Green Growth approach. The Government of China announced six measures for Green Growth and President Hu Jintao called on developed countries to support the Green Growth of developing countries at the G-8 Summit in June 2007. The President of the Republic of Kazakhstan also pointed out the need to pursue Green Growth. And, at the end of 2007, the Government of Cambodia decided to establish a National Committee on Green Growth.

There are many more encouraging signs that countries in the region are eager to adopt ecologically efficient growth patterns. UN ESCAP is committed to further disseminate the message of Green Growth in the region and lead the age of green economics and green development in Asia and the Pacific.

Further information

Simon Hoiberg Olsen, Environment and Sustainable Development Division, UN ESCAP, 5th Floor, United Nations Building, Rajadamnern Nok Avenue, 1200 Bangkok, Thailand. Email: olsens@un.org. Web: www.greengrowth.org.

On the Web

Read more about market mechanisms for climate action in articles by Rae Kwon Chung published in Climate Action (0.2Mb download) and Climate Policy.

Bright Ideas

atmosfair

Offsetting air travel with atmosfair buys solar mirrors that provide energy for the preparation of thousands of meals daily in India

Dow Building Solutions

Dow Building Solutions has prepared a short information sheet covering the construction of green roofs

Asics Commitment

The fabric in Asics Commitment range of sportswear is woven from bamboo yarn

SolidNav

SolidNav has developed electric propulsion units for small water craft and sailboats

WATT

WATT, a nightclub in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, has a dancefloor that generates electricity and toilets that flush with rainwater

Energy Merry-go-round

During play, the Energy Merry-go-round generates electricity that is transferred to a battery and 220V invertor for use in the classroom

Think Green From Home

Waste Management provides home recycling kits for compact fluorescent bulbs, batteries and electronics

Climate Savers

Norwegian music festivals, Canal Street and Hove, have joined the Climate Neutral Network

PlayPump

The PlayPump water system doubles as a water pump and a merry-go-round for children

FCX Clarity

Honda is leasing the hydrogen-powered fuel cell FCX Clarity to private individuals in southern California

TIDE

TIDE, in southern India, markets energy-efficient stoves that reduce fuelwood use by as much as 30 per cent

BioCity Program

Curitiba's BioCity Program (0.3Mb download) aims to halt the rapid rate at which cities develop and reduce biodiversity loss

More Bright Ideas...

Tiempo Climate Newswatch
Updated: November 16th 2008