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Climate Change Congress: Stern words
Later he laid out the pros and cons of both carbon
trading and carbon tax schemes. “Don’t let anyone kid you that a tax
scheme is clearly the best,” he said.
Stern put together the Stern Review of the economics of
climate change in 2006 for the UK government. In the light of evidence since
then, he believes his report underestimated the damages climate change could
cause and the speed of that change. Today he says two big challenges face
us - poverty and climate change. And if
we don’t fix climate change we will create a physical climate so hostile that
the hard-won gains in development are lost.
“We should be supporting development that is shaped
and driven by developing countries themselves,” said Stern. “This is
about working together to expand the options that people have, the technologies
that are available…then there would be a real partnership.”
The necessary resources could come from carbon finance,
overseas development assistance, private investment, and the various kinds of
guarantee and insurance instruments available to the international finance
institutions.
Stern stressed that if developed countries can show
examples where they have achieved low-carbon growth, it would be far more
powerful than just talking about it. To date developing countries have only
seen development in the west result from a high-carbon growth path but this
need no longer be the case.
Stern reckons that a high-carbon growth future would kill
itself, firstly from high hydrocarbon costs and then because of climate change.
“We should see action as, rather, attraction and inaction as
inexcusable,” he said.
That action is particularly attractive in an economic
slowdown, when resources are cheaper. “Now’s the time to get the
unemployed of Europe getting our houses more energy efficient,” said
Stern. “We must not sow the seeds of the next bubble. We can come out of
this one and lay the foundations for low carbon growth.”
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