1 / 31

Green Economy and Green Growth: World Bank Approaches

Green Economy and Green Growth: World Bank Approaches. Mike Toman, Lead Economist and Manager, Environment and Energy Research Team 18 May 2010. Environment and MDGs. Many Themes Under “Green Economy”. Low-carbon growth “Green stimulus” recovery packages

chana
Download Presentation

Green Economy and Green Growth: World Bank Approaches

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Green Economy and Green Growth: World Bank Approaches Mike Toman, Lead Economist and Manager, Environment and Energy Research Team 18 May 2010

  2. Environment and MDGs

  3. Many Themes Under “Green Economy” • Low-carbon growth • “Green stimulus” recovery packages • “Green infrastructure” investment • Meeting basic energy and water needs • Increasing resilience to natural variability • Improved efficiency of existing environmental regulation • Correcting harmful market distortions • New economic opportunities (green supply chains, eco-tourism, green innovation,…)

  4. What Green Growth is Not: • A guaranteed “win-win” for environment and GDP growth • Real costs of environmental protection yield improvement in quality of life • A direct path to new markets and economic opportunities • Some green technologies are not (yet) market ready; others are missed opportunities • An assured solution to problems of poverty reduction and social equity • South Africa’s electricity “lifeline” policy yields significant benefits but also requires ongoing expenditures; broader “safety net” challenges

  5. BUT: If addressed as an Economic Issue, Green Economy is a Growth Opportunity • Complement technology development and standards, implementation targets with pro-environment, pro-inclusive-growth economic incentives • Target incentives for cost-effectiveness • Solid enforced legal structure also key • Policy reforms go beyond the environment and energy sphere

  6. General Concepts of “Green Economy” and “Green Growth” • Stronger environmental & natural resource management & investment to enhance growth, reduce poverty • Enhanced quality and availability of communal land and water resources in rural areas • Growth-enhancing investments in technical improvements and infrastructure that also reduce environmental impacts • Includes but goes beyond existing approaches for environmental protection

  7. General Concepts of “Green Economy” and “Green Growth” • Maintain environmental sustainability • “Meet needs of present without compromising ability of future to meet its needs” • Offset “natural capital” depletion with other social wealth build-up – increased aggregate savings to accelerate growth

  8. General Concepts of “Green Economy” and “Green Growth” • Reduce market failures and institutional barriers to green markets • Institutional and governance improvements that improve economic incentives for sustainability (investment and consumption) • Addressing economically wasteful and environmental harmful subsidies – energy, water, land use, …with concern for impacts on poor • Targeted, cost-effective fiscal incentives for green investment • Improved national accounting for costs of resource and environmental depletion

  9. Different Emphases at Various Stages of Development • Enhancing natural resource productivity – “basic needs plus” • Addressing emerging problems as economy grows and diversifies • Taking opportunities in green innovation and new market and employment development • Not just low-carbon development!

  10. Key Message: Green Economy is an Economic Challenge and a Growth Opportunity Core Near-Term Policy Issues: • Employment • Fiscal Space • Efficiency of Resource Use • Immediate environmental threats • Stage setting for longer-term sustainability Not listed in any priority order

  11. Role of Economic Incentives • Stronger and clearer economic incentives are crucial for advancing on all these issues – not just for the environment • Price signals reflecting social costs of resource & environmental impacts are inherent part of incentive system – induce more efficient and sustainable uses • But, there is much more to the story than the pain of higher product prices!

  12. Price Signals Reinforce Green Investment and Consumption • Changes in input demands creates ready demand for more eco-efficient technology – increasing economic rewards, reducing risks & financing barriers • Can be complemented selectively with performance standards, demonstrations to increase scale and lower costs • Signals can be designed to reflect balance of more immediate and longer-term environmental and resource conservation priorities

  13. Green Incentives Feed Back Directly on Employment Possibilities • Can start with most available, low-cost and labor-intensive opportunities • Solar water heating • Green building retrofits • Off-grid power for more remote areas • Installation of efficient water using devices • Audit and assessment functions • Transport congestion reduction • On-site materials recycling, re-use

  14. Green Pricing Measures Can Increase Badly Needed Fiscal Space • Financing technology innovation/diffusion, other longer-term green growth options • Increase green job skills • Help for cost of lifeline measures • Measures to reduce highly segmented and distorted labor markets • Research indicates net cost of increasing energy prices may be minimal if accompanied by fiscal and labor market reforms

  15. Need for Complementary Measures • Improved access for rural/poor credit, transportation infrastructure, education for rural/poor • Cost-effective, market-enhancing economic regulation in energy sector • Reduced institutional barriers to green technology policies – finance, trade, human knowledge

  16. Cautionary Notes in Targeting Policies and Measures • Subsidizing some green investment can be costly, especially if not well targeted • Tax breaks reduce fiscal space • Feed-in tariffs for costlier renewables shift cost to all users • Industrial policy to develop green markets and technologies? • Generally has worked only for certain countries in certain circumstances • Important to rely on comparative advantages for managing market and regulatory uncertainties

  17. World Bank Has Strong and Growing Commitment to Mainstreaming Environment in Growth Initiatives • Goal of 50% clean energy lending in relatively near future, including low-emission transport • Improved watershed management (not just end of pipe treatment) • Support for country access to donor green grant funding • Integrating environment into national level development partnership strategies • Technical assistance and knowledge transfer

  18. Some Examples of WB Supported Environment Mainstreaming • Africa Climate Resilient Growth Strategy • Assessment of poverty, environment and health linkages in Egypt, Yemen and Djibouti • Expanded Bank assistance in Sub-Saharan Africa for management of protected areas

  19. Need for Analytically Sound, Evidence-based Measures Is Paramount • Range of environment – growth synergies not yet fully mapped out • Tradeoffs between nearer-term stimulus and longer-term growth • Relative growth performance of more or less green strategies • Role of innovation and strategic capacity investment to enhance green growth

  20. A Very Wise Man Once Said… • ….I have discovered the secret that after climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb…. • ….I dare not linger, for my long walk is not ended.

  21. End of presentation mtoman@worldbank.org Questions and comments very welcome. Thank you!

  22. Persisting Environmental Challenges Environmental Health and Pollution Management • 24% of disease burden and 23% of all deaths in developing countries from environmental risk factors • Half of malnutrition caused by poor sanitation from lack of access to safe water • Indoor air pollution responsible for 1.5 million premature deaths from respiratory illness; 2.7% of global burden of disease Sustainable Natural Resource Management • Deterioration seen in water, air, forests, grasslands, marine resources, agro-ecosystems • Overfishing: 75% of global fish stocks fully or over-exploited • Damages to protected areas, wetlands, other ecosystem buffers • Climate Change

  23. Environment Lending FY09 FY09, ENRM portfolio amounted to $13 billion (10% of total) Active Environment and Natural Resource Management (ENRM) Portfolio

  24. Persisting Environmental Challenges Policies, Governance Institutions, International Cooperation • Limited inter-ministerial coordination for advancing and balancing economic, environmental goals • Limited coordination among levels of government • Shortcomings in natural resource management • Challenges and opportunities of urbanization • Inadequate enforcement • Environmentally and economically harmful policy distortions • Weaknesses in international cooperation

  25. 2001 Environment Strategy: Environmental Quality and Poverty

  26. Variety of Implementation Methods • Higher profile of env in country strategies • Maintain safeguards management • Increased analysis of environmental opportunities and implementation costs • So far, limited economic analysis of environmental improvements in practice • Increased env policy-based lending

  27. Infrastructure and Green Economy Studies highlight severe infrastructure gaps: South Africa figures better, e.g. 81% electricity access

  28. Africa’s Expenditure Gaps Amplified by Various Inefficiencies: Source: World Bank Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic, 2010

  29. Private Participation Remains Limited Source: World Bank data base on private infrastructure investment (PPIAF)

  30. Green Growth and “Green Stimulus” • WB infrastructure lending increased from $2.5billion in FY2008 to $3.6 billion in FY2009 • Separate longer-term economic benefits from near-term stimulus effects • Many green growth investments could have large employment impacts only over the longer term • Economic benefits of “creating new jobs” depends on cost-effectiveness of stimulus

  31. Illustrative Examples – South Africa context • Eskom investment – critical need to alleviate power supply problems, longer-term focus on improved efficiency and renewables • Current WB guidance on coal investment • Continued emphasis on biodiversity and tourism benefits from protected areas • Cape Peninsula, Simangaliso Wetland Park • Water –persistent need to improve systemic management and resilience to shocks, increase efficiency of use

More Related