Greenpeace International was hoping that the G20 leaders meeting in Seoul would honor the promises they made a year ago on climate action and begin cutting fossil fuel subsidies and helping the world to ramp-up the green economy.
In a recent statement, Patricia Lerner, Greenpeace International Senior Political Adviser said, 'This G20 (meeting) is supposed to give a strong signal of support for the upcoming climate talks in Cancun (Mexico), but instead we understand there are moves afoot to backtrack on commitments made a year ago."
Greenpeace issued a G20 checklist that including honouring their promises on climate, closing the gap between industrialised country emission reduction commitments and what the climate science demands. Leaders must also create the financial and regulatory conditions that incentivise a green economy, and agree on the indicators and reporting mechanisms needed to monitor progress.
Another key issue committed to by G20 leaders in Pittsburgh last year and reported on in Toronto earlier this year was the phase-out of subsidies to the fossil fuel industry. A Greenpeace report, written by the Global Subsidies Initiative, reveals a lack of transparency around fossil fuel subsidies. The review recommends that the focus should be on a much wider range of issues than merely revenue maximization.
Greenpeace also called on G20 leaders to invest in climate finance, switch to clean energy and stop deforestation. 'These governments have a choice: They can lead the world to a clean energy future, safe from the ravages of climate change' or they can continue to subsidise the oil industry and accept the human and economic consequences of dangerous climate change,' Lerner said.
Related Posts
The G20 and the Transition to a Greener Economy
The G20 and the Green Economy
The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity
Spain Renews its Commitment to Clean Energy at the G20
UN Hopeful about G20 Climate Finance
Video on Green Growth - Korea's Key to a Better Future
Korea's Green Growth and the New Expanison Paradigm
UN Chief Asks G20 to Focus on a Sustainable Recovery
G20 Summit in Toronto Ends with Little Action on Climate Change
G20 Must Cooperate for a Sustainable Recovery
G20 and Central Bank Governors Joint Communique
G20 Disagreements and Global Economic Reforms
Program and Plans for G8 and G20 Summits in Canada
UN Climate Change Initiatives Post Toronto
G20 Security Concerns Force Cancellation of Sustainable Supply Chain Event
G20 Protestors Dilute Green Message
Canadians Disappointed with Conservative's Lack of leadership at the Toronto G20 Summit
The G20 and the Developing World Disagree on Proposed Climate Change Protocols
Competing National Priorities
End Fossil Fuel Subsidies
Local Business Promotes Green Agenda for G20 in Pittsburgh
G20 Lays the Foundation for a Better World
Global Warming Exposes Resources but Arctic Meeting Leaves Some Out in the Cold
G8's More Aggressive GHG Targets
Home
climate finance
COP 16
COP16
emissions-reduction
oil subsidies
regulation
Greenpeace's G20 Checklist
- Blogger Comment
- Facebook Comment
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
0 comments:
Post a Comment