The Asian Age

IMF chief: We’re cooked if we fail on climate

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Lima ( Peru), Oct. 8: Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde said that failure to take urgent action on global warming will condemn humanity to the same fate as the Peruvian poultry that so many delegates to the group’s annual meeting are enjoying this week in a country famed for its cuisine.

“If we collective­ly chicken out of this we’ll all turn into chickens and we’ll all be fried, grilled, toasted and roasted,” said Ms Lagarde on Wednesday.

Her comments came in a panel discussion involving World Bank president Jim Yong Kim, UN climate talks executive secretary Christiana Figueres and economist and climate expert Nicholas Stern.

Ms Lagarde and Mr Kim argued strongly for removing subsidies on fossil fuels that are worth more than $ 5 trillion a year and on the immediate need for carbon taxes so that the burning of fossil fuels can fund clean

‘ If we collective­ly chicken out of this we’ll all turn into chickens and we’ll all be fried, grilled, toasted and roasted,’ said Christine Lagarde on the need to take urgent action on global warming energy replacemen­ts.

But they both acknowledg­ed it’s a big challenge.

“It is just the right moment to introduce carbon taxes,” Ms Lagarde said.

“Finance ministers are looking for revenues. That’s the fate of finance ministers. But it’s particular­ly the case at the moment because many have already used a lot of their fiscal buffers... and are always in need of some fiscal buffers in order to fight the next crisis,” she added.

“I know that a lot of people would rather do emissions trading systems, but we believe that carbon taxation would be a lot better,” she said.

“We have been trying to help countries remove fuel subsidies,” said Mr Kim, which inevitably means higher prices at the gas pump. “Politician­s don’t like it when taxi drivers and truck drivers block the streets.”

Questioned about whether the world’s government­s can make the necessary shift to clean energy to prevent catastroph­ic climate change, Ms Figueres said that while pledges from 146 countries submitted ahead of December’s climate talks in Paris are not enough to bring greenhouse gases down to acceptable levels, she believes closing the gap is “entirely doable”.

The world’s finance ministers and central bankers were beginning to arrive in Lima for the joint annual meetings of the World Bank and IMF that run through Sunday. The lending institutio­ns hold their annual meetings away from their Washington headquarte­rs every three years.

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