Sherbrooke Record

Green recovery gains momentum as world confronts multiple crises

- By David Suzuki

After the 2008 stock and housing market crash plunged the U.S. and world into economic upheaval, government­s came to the rescue, with trillions of dollars in corporate bailouts. Executives at the insurance firm AIG were so happy with their Us$152-billion package (more than U.S. and European countries spent in total on developmen­tal aid the same year), they celebrated with a $440,000 trip to a luxury spa resort!

As with the 2008-09 financial crisis, CO2 emissions have dropped during the pandemic. But the 2009 economic stimulus and recovery ignited a renewed spike in emissions. The measures revived struggling economies and it wasn’t long before industrial interests were again fuelling engines of habitat destructio­n, pollution, climate disruption and other environmen­tal devastatio­n.

COVID-19 is revealing that recovery’s unstable foundation. As government­s worldwide develop plans to recover from this pandemic’s impacts, we have to ensure it’s a lasting recovery that puts us on track to confront current and future threats, including the climate and biodiversi­ty crises.

An Internatio­nal Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t study, conducted at the request of leading Canadian environmen­tal organizati­ons including the David Suzuki Foundation, argues any corporate bailouts and stimulus spending should come with “green strings” attached. Measures to stimulate the economy shouldn’t make the climate crisis worse and should aim for a sustainabl­e, equitable, resilient future for all.

As economists and others worldwide have been saying, our recovery from this pandemic will be stronger if we correct course away from activities that cause climate disruption, biodiversi­ty loss, environmen­tal devastatio­n and increasing disease spread — and exacerbate inequality.

Former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor Mark Carney says the world can’t afford to miss an opportunit­y as it did after the 2008 financial crisis. “You can’t wish away the systemic risk,” he said. “In the end, a small investment up front can save a tremendous cost down the road.”

Research shows environmen­tally targeted stimulus measures offer as many or more employment and economic benefits as neutral or harmful measures. Studies of U.S. stimulus policies during the 2008-09 global financial crisis found green policies performed well, especially compared to fossil fuel infrastruc­ture funding.

A survey of 230 leading economists representi­ng 53 countries, published in the Oxford Review of Economic Policy, found “green stimulus measures” were “among the most beneficial for the economy, as well as having strong potential to cut emissions,” and “could help decouple emissions from growth, avoid stranded assets — and stranded jobs — and redirect the global economy towards a more prosperous net-zero emissions pathway.”

The IISD study calls on Canada to adopt a range of measures, from making funding for industry conditiona­l on measurable plans to reduce emissions to net-zero by 2050, to ensuring support goes to workers and not executive perks, buybacks and dividends.

Study co-author Aaron Cosbey said government recovery plans will determine our environmen­tal footprint for decades. “We’ll end up spending hundreds of billions of dollars on relief and recovery — an unpreceden­ted investment by Canadian taxpayers. It’s the government’s right and duty to attach conditions to that spending, making sure it drives us toward the future we all want: a green, prosperous Canada.”

The European Union is already taking up the challenge, forming a “green recovery alliance,” initiated in response to calls from European environmen­t ministers “for the European Green Deal to be centralise­d in the EU’S postpandem­ic recovery plan.”

“We are choosing to accelerate the ecological transition when the time comes to reinvest in the economy,” said European Parliament environmen­t committee chair Pascal Canfin. “COVID-19 has not made the climate

Re: Fromagerie Nouvelle France investment (The Sherbrooke Record article June 29, 2020) was so very pleased to read of the major investment being made by the provincial government in Fromagerie Nouvelle France, in order that they may build their own production facility in Racine, Quebec. Since its inception ten years ago I have watched, with admiration, the growth of this local cheese producer. Year after year they have won prestigiou­s awards for their fine quality cheeses. Even the late Stewart Maclean, on one of his tours across the Eastern Townships, raved about these sheep and cow milk products. Congratula­tions to the sister/ brother team of Marie-chantal and Jean-paul Houde. They will soon become a major employer in the tiny village of Racine. You are doing us proud!

Icrisis go away.”

Amsterdam is the first city to replace the antiquated economic growth model with “doughnut economics” as a guide for public policy decisions. Oxford University economist Kate Raworth developed the model, based on the idea that an economy should meet everyone’s core needs within the means of the planet.

Many are feeling the effects of the pandemic — isolation, job loss, economic upheaval, illness, death — and the desire is to quickly return to “normal.” But “normal” isn’t good enough, as we learned in 2009. To ensure our well-being and survival, we must build back better. We have the knowledge, resources and research to do it. All we need now is political will.

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