Cape Times

Macron pushes climate action

Seeks financing to help poorer nations cope with impact after US left Paris accord

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FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron is urging wealthy countries and global companies to commit more funds to combating global warming and help poorer nations deal with the impact of climate change.

The French leader is hosting the “One Planet” summit two years after nearly 200 government­s agreed in Paris to end their heavy reliance on fossil fuels and limit further global warming.

Macron wants to show that progress towards those hard-fought goals is being made after US President Donald Trump said in June he was taking the US out of the pact.

Trump’s decision to withdraw was a “deep wake-up call for the private sector” to take action, he said.

“If we decide not to move and not change our way to produce, to invest, to behave, we will be responsibl­e for billions of victims,” Macron said on Monday night.

Although Macron has said that concrete projects with real financing behind them are lacking, no internatio­nally binding commitment­s will be announced at the summit.

In focus is how public and private financial institutio­ns can mobilise more money and how investors can pressure corporate giants to shift towards more ecological­ly friendly strategies.

More than 200 institutio­nal investors with $26 trillion in assets under management said yesterday they would step up pressure on the world’s biggest corporate greenhouse gas emitters to combat climate change.

That, they said, would be more effective than threatenin­g to pull the plug on their investment­s in companies, which include Coal India, Gazprom, Exxon Mobil and China Petroleum & Chemical Corporatio­n.

Separately, European Commission vice-president Valdis Dombrovski­s said the executive was “looking positively” at plans to reduce capital requiremen­ts for environmen­tally-friendly investment­s by banks in a bid to boost the green economy.

The move could be part of a broader set of measures the EU plans to present in March to meet the target of cutting carbon emissions by 40% by 2030, for which it estimates around 180 billion in additional low-carbon investment­s are needed per year.

Climate change is causing more frequent and severe flooding, droughts, storms and heatwaves as average global temperatur­es rise to new records, sea ice melts in the Arctic and sea levels rise.

Developing nations say the rich are lagging with a commitment dating back to 2009 to provide $100bn a year by 2020 – from public and private sources alike – to help them switch from fossil fuels to greener energy sources and adapt to the effects of climate change.

“The missing piece of the jigsaw is the funding to help the world’s poorer countries access clean energy so they don’t follow the fossil fuel-powered path of the rich world,” said Mohamed Adow, charity Christian Aid’s lead on climate change.

Yesterday, the European Commission unveiled 9bn worth of investment­s targeting sustainabl­e cities, sustainabl­e energy and sustainabl­e agricultur­e for Africa and EU neighbourh­ood countries.

Around 50 world leaders and ministers are due in Paris, including Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and leaders of states at the sharp end of climate change such as Chad, Bolivia and Haiti.

The US will send only an official delegation from the Paris Embassy, but screen superstars Leonardo DiCaprio and Arnold Schwarzene­gger and California Governor Jerry Brown, leader of the world’s sixth largest economy, are championin­g more action.

In a pointed piece of timing, Macron used the eve of the summit to award 18 grants to foreign climate scientists, most of whom are currently US-based, to come and work in France.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? French President Emmanuel Macron, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, second left, World Bank president Jim Yong Kim, and first lady Brigitte Macron at the Élysée Palace, in Paris, yesterday.
PICTURE: AP French President Emmanuel Macron, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, second left, World Bank president Jim Yong Kim, and first lady Brigitte Macron at the Élysée Palace, in Paris, yesterday.

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