Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Comment

Green growth is our only option

In the run-up to the UN Climate Change Conference in Sharm El-Sheikh, this year's energy crisis has intensified the debate over what policies developing countries should be putting first. Some argue that poor countries should focus on development rather than decarbonisation; others advocate "green development", which would involve leapfrogging fossil fuels altogether.

Meanwhile, rich countries, multilateral institutions, and major lenders like China are all phasing out development financing for fossil-fuel projects even as they reopen their own coal-fired power plants. What are developing countries supposed to think?

To capitalise on high oil and gas prices, some are auctioning off their peatlands and rainforests for drilling and mining. Not mincing words, the Democratic Republic of the Congo's lead climate representative recently pointed out that his country's priority is to achieve stronger growth, "not to save the planet". This way of framing the matter is understandable, given the rich world's longstanding failure to meet its promises and help finance climate mitigation and adaptation in the global south. But the supposed tradeoff between economic development and green policies is unconvincing -- or at least suffers from a high degree of short-termism.

Studies have shown that the catastrophic effects of unfettered climate change will be felt first and most acutely in poorer countries. That means there is no viable future scenario in which the global south will use fossil fuels to escape destitution and invest in decarbonisation only later. Following the same path that rich countries took will lead to climate havoc. Like everyone else, poor countries need to contribute as much as possible to the global decarbonisation effort not to "save the planet" but to save themselves from even more severe droughts, floods, famines, and instability.

Moreover, the idea that highly polluting economic growth should be prioritised over green investments rests on the premise that there will be a market for highly polluting goods in the future. But looking beyond the short term, it is already clear that a combination of changing consumer preferences, carbon border taxes, sustainability provisions in trade treaties, and various regulatory requirements and labelling standards in rich countries will render pollution-intensive options a bad investment. In this likely future, developing countries could end up locked into products and technologies that the rest of the world regards as antiquated or inferior -- be it internal combustion engine components, "fast fashion" garments, unrecyclable plastics, or fossil fuels.

It is worth remembering that every single development "miracle" since the 1950s was sustained by a rapid expansion of exports that were destined for rich, industrialised, high-consuming countries. No such opportunity will exist for countries that are reliant on highly polluting products. Among the sectors that are instead widely expected to experience exponential growth in the years ahead are electric vehicles (EVs), batteries, and green hydrogen.

Some remain unconvinced, based on the observation that the only rapid economic growth in human history was powered by fossil fuels. But what worked in the past will not necessarily work in the future.

Finally, the tradeoff narrative assumes that highly polluting options are cheaper, whereas green technologies are a luxury that only affluent countries can afford. Yet even if this is true at the moment, the gap is rapidly shrinking; the green option will soon be cheaper, too. This is already true of solar and wind energy in many parts of the world, and EVs, meat alternatives, and other products are sure to follow the same path. Owing to large public and private investments green technologies' descent down the cost curve will accelerate, abating the costs of the energy transition worldwide, and making fossil-fuelled development relatively more expensive.

Some countries in the global south are already putting these principles into practice. Ethiopia, for example, aims to reach middle-income status by building a green economy, with investments in afforestation, renewables, and improved transportation systems.

As Ricardo Hausmann of Harvard University observes, "green development" is no longer an oxymoron. On the contrary, it is the only realistic option. To achieve sustained growth, each country must determine how it can best contribute to the global green supply chain, based on its comparative advantages. These may lie in extracting the raw materials needed for the green transition, producing and exporting renewable electricity and hydrogen, or manufacturing advanced green products at home.

Either way, growth in the coming decades will be green. Countries that don't get on board now risk being left behind. ©2022 Project Syndicate


Alessio Terzi, a lecturer at Sciences Po, is an economist at the European Commission and the author of 'Growth for Good: Reshaping Capitalism to Save Humanity from Climate Catastrophe' (Harvard University Press, 2022).

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.