Prima Contact Harta
 Română  English
 
 
Prima / CADRUL NAŢIONAL / Materiale informaţionale / Noutăţi / World is missing chance for green recovery from COVID-19, U.N. says
World is missing chance for green recovery from COVID-19, U.N. says
10.03.2021  
  sursa  
imprimare

 

https://news.trust.org/item/20210310122653-02vgi/

 

The majority of large economies' planned COVID-19 recovery spending is not green, putting the world on track to plough billions of dollars into reinforcing polluting industries, a report co-authored by the United Nations said on Wednesday.

 

The COVID-19 pandemic last year triggered the largest contraction in the global economy since the Second World War, prompting unprecedented spending by governments to salvage their virus-hit economies.

But while many leaders pledged to "build back better" and use recovery cash to fight climate change, so far, they are falling short.

Of the $1.9 trillion that the world's 50 biggest economies announced in COVID-19 recovery spending by the end of 2020, only 18% - or $341 billion - can be considered green, according to the report by the University of Oxford and the UN Environment Programme.

"In many cases, governments have been playing politics," report author Brian O'Callaghan, lead researcher at Oxford University's Economic Recovery Project, told Reuters.

"We've seen examples of leaders using small green packages to dominate the headlines, while quietly pushing through much larger packages without a comment to their environmental characteristics."

Wealthy nations accounted for most green spending, among them Spain, South Korea, Germany and Britain. The biggest chunk of green funding was for transport, such as electric vehicle subsidies and cycling infrastructure. Low-carbon energy also benefited, while the United States and China earmarked cash for public parks.

The authors pointed to "a growing body of evidence" that green fiscal spending can deliver stronger economic returns than traditional alternatives.

They called on high-income countries to also use recovery money to support poorer nations and marginalised communities, which have been disproportionately affected both by COVID-induced deaths and economic difficulties such as job losses.

Separately, governments last year pledged $11.1 trillion in rescue funds to tackle the pandemic's short-term impacts. The report focussed on recovery spending, since this will shape the economic trajectory of countries for years to come.

It excluded European Union recovery funds not yet allocated by EU countries in their spending plans.

 

 

 


Plasează articolul în:
google Delicious Digg Yahoo Facebook Twitter Netvibes linkedin
 
 
Prima   Contact   Harta
vizitatori: 3312562
sus
B2B and B2C solutions , Branding & Graphic Design Services,Website Design and Development , E-Commerce Systems,Software Application Architecture and Development,Multimedia solutions , 2D/3D modeling & animation solutions,Video & Post Production Creat de Trimaran
 
SCHIMBAREA CLIMEI – esenţa fenomenului   /   CADRUL INTERNAŢIONAL   /   CADRUL NAŢIONAL   /   CERCETĂRI ŞI MODELARE   /   DOCUMENTE   /   UIPM
Tel. +373 22 232247   /  Fax. +373 22 232247

Adresa: str. Alexandru cel Bun 51A, mun. Chisinau, Republica Moldova