UN proposes new Marshall Plan
A United Nations report launched yesterday recommends a new Marshall
Plan of more than $500 billion per year, or one percent of global
output, to help developing countries ease the impact of global warming
and adjust to its effects while continuing on a path of economic growth.
“The science is clear. We need to drastically lower greenhouse gas
emissions to protect the planet and avoid dangerous temperature rises
globally,” stressed Rob Vos, a Director of the UN Department of Economic
and Social Affairs (DESA).
“If we do not significantly reduce emissions the damage to poor
countries as a percentage of GDP (gross domestic product) will be up to
more than 10 times greater than in the United States and most other
developed countries,” Vos told reporters in New York at the launch of
the 2009 World Economic and Social Survey: Promoting Development, Saving
the Planet.
Vos noted that for every rise of one degree in global temperature,
the annual average growth in developing countries drops between two and
three percentage points with little impact on advanced countries.
However, to satisfy development needs, energy demands will have to
rise in developing countries, posing a challenge in how to combine the
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions with economic objectives.
“To do this we will need huge adjustments in developed, but in
particular developing countries,” Vos said.
“The transformation of energy services will be the key. This will
have to go hand-in-hand with large-scale interrelated investments in
order to address simultaneously the climate change and development
goals.” he said.
The World Economic and Social Survey suggests that market solutions,
including the development of a carbon market, through “cap and trade”
mechanisms or taxation schemes in developed countries, are not the
solution for developing countries.
Rather, it recommends a combination of large-scale investments and
active government policy interventions for developing countries.
Among the possible multilateral measures in support of a global
investment program set out in the report is the creation of a global
clean energy fund, a global feed-in tariff regime in support of
renewable energy sources, a climate technology program and a more
balanced intellectual property regime for aiding the transfer of clean
energy technology.
“We are suggesting that we need a globally funded public investment
program to allow developing countries to engage both in cleaner
generation of energy and still meet their development objectives,” Vos
said. |