Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Robert Zoellick,
Climate change is a development, economic and investment challenge, not just an environmental issue. An effective global accord on climate change will have to recognize the interests and needs of developing countries.
That is why this week in
After President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono met with the World Bank in September,
It is proposing an initiative on reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation, with support from the World Bank and the
Developing countries recognize the dangers climate change poses to their territories, economies and people. They are interested in the potential of carbon markets and new technologies to finance greenhouse gas reductions.
But many are wary of climate change negotiations because of two fears: that international assistance will be diverted from social development and growth plans, and that climate change policies championed by developed countries will constrain the growth of countries moving up behind them.
Unless the concerns of the developing countries are addressed, any new international accord on climate change will be neither global nor successful.
While the environment ministers in
The finance ministers will discuss policy options, economic incentives and disincentives, and financing arrangements that combine growth and energy sources with low-carbon strategies, technological development, efficiencies and measures to adapt to climate change.
The engagement of finance ministers will help to integrate climate change mitigation and adaptation issues into national priorities and budgets as well as the international dialogue on financing instruments and flows.
Climate change policies cannot just be the frosting on the cake of development; they need to be baked into the recipe of growth and social development.
The World Bank and international financial institutions, working with developed countries, can help. We are devising innovative and concessional financing mechanisms. In
The Clean Energy Investment Framework will promote alternative energy, efficiency and lower emissions. For example,
International partners can also assist countries with the implementation and expansion of carbon trading systems to finance low-carbon growth in poorer countries.
The World Bank’s private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation, can help draw private capital towards developing countries’ needs for an estimated US$ 200billion per year of low-carbon energy production.
We also need to encourage research and development in new technologies for low-carbon growth and advance their rapid adoption in the developing world.
For many developing countries, the stresses of climate change are today’s crisis, not tomorrow’s uncertainty. The poorest are the most vulnerable to calamities and adverse changes in health conditions, food production, water resources, coastal integrity and biodiversity.
Yet research and spending on climate adaptation have fallen far behind work on mitigation. We should be developing integrated adaptation and mitigation strategies that will reinforce one another.
The
Progress with developing countries will be a prerequisite for a new global climate change agreement that works, and is sustainable environmentally, economically and politically.
Source: The





























