Business leaders to invest more in slowing down climate change
Business leaders to invest more in slowing down climate change
A new investment fund for green businesses and a tool to measure emissions were among the pledges to help governments curb global warming at a summit on climate financing convened by the French president on Wednesday.
Emmanuel Macron called on government and business leaders to invest more in slowing down climate change as he opened the second annual “One Planet” summit in New York.
“We have to shift one-third of the global financing to the financing of climate change and new climate action,” he said.
“So governments, the World Bank, all the development banks, business leaders and investors, it is our job. Everybody is waiting for us and everybody today wants us just to accelerate.”
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, said it would help structure a climate fund for investment in green sectors such as renewable energy and low-carbon transportation across Latin America, Asia, and Africa.
The French and German governments and large philanthropic organizations including The Hewlett Foundation have pledged initial funds to the Climate Finance Partnership, which organizers said would be set up next year.
The one-day gathering in New York, where world leaders were gathered for the United Nations General Assembly, drew the leaders of global companies as well as more than two dozen heads of state and government.
The World Bank, which lends to developing countries, announced a platform to pledge $1 billion toward developing the battery-storage technology.
Energy storage is becoming increasingly important as the production of renewable energy rises because the wind might not blow or the sun shines during the peak hours when most consumers turn on their lights and appliances.
Tech giant Google announced the launch of a tool to generate data on greenhouse gas emissions from road traffic and on the solar capacity of cities, which it captures through its popular mapping service Google Earth.
“If you cannot measure it you can’t manage it,” said Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor who is now the U.N. Secretary General’s special envoy for Cities and Climate Change.
Cities worldwide account for more than 70 percent of carbon dioxide emissions.
Climate change is causing more frequent and severe flooding, droughts, storms, and heatwaves as average global temperatures rise to new records, sea ice melts in the Arctic and sea levels rise.
The second “One Planet” summit took place nearly three years after almost 200 governments agreed on the Paris accord to end the fossil-fuel era this century and limit further global warming to well below 2 degrees above pre-industrial times.
U.S. President Donald Trump weakened the pact last year when he said the United States, the world’s second biggest greenhouse gas polluter after China, would pull out.