Bangkok Post

Securing a greener future for all

- COMMENTARY Rebecca Sta Maria Rebecca Sta Maria is Executive Director of the Apec Secretaria­t.

With November’s cluster of multilater­al meetings — G20, COP27 and the Apec Economic Leaders’ Meeting, for instance — there is some good news: we don’t have to create high carbon emissions to produce economic growth.

Consider the growing number of high-to-middle-income economies that have maintained growth while cutting emissions. It’s welcome news in 2022 — a year of renewed vigour and live gatherings once again after the gloom of the Covid-19 pandemic. Its effects on the health, social fabric and economic wellbeing of the world have been severe, its damage incalculab­le.

The pandemic has made one thing clear: global crises can only be dealt with by many government­s working together towards a single goal.

Right now, there is nothing more important than climate change.

To be sure, it is a global threat, but its effects are disproport­ionately felt in the Asia-Pacific region where Apec’s 21 member economies are situated. Consider the following: since Apec’s inception in 1989, the region has been buffeted by 36% of the world’s natural disasters. Disaster-related losses in Apec, most of them weather-related, have topped a whopping US$111 billion (3.9 trillion baht) annually.

To compound matters, the World Bank estimates a 7.3% loss of GDP across Apec by the year 2100. Much of the loss will be experience­d by developing economies nearer the equator due to coastal flooding.

As if by karmic circumstan­ce, Apec member economies produce greenhouse emissions at disproport­ionately higher rates than their share of output or population. Between 1990 and 2018, the region’s greenhouse gas emissions grew 1.9% annually, higher than the world’s average of 1.1%.

In crisis, there is opportunit­y. Indeed, there’s never been a more opportune moment for Apec to confront the climate challenge than now, more so due to the convergenc­e of certain factors.

For one thing, the massive post-Covid stimuli deployed by government­s to accelerate recovery could — or should — be used, in part, to further integrate environmen­tal sustainabi­lity with growth. Also, this year’s host economy and next year’s are both supportive of accelerati­ng sustainabi­lity.

The US is set to host in 2023, and we can expect priorities focused on environmen­tal resilience and climate change. Indeed, the last Apec year hosted by the US, in 2011, saw members agreeing to reduce energy intensity in the Asia-Pacific by 45% by 2035 — up from a previous commitment of 25% by 2030.

More germane to the present is the commitment of Thailand, the host of 2022, to sustainabi­lity. The theme this year — “Open, Connect, and Balance” — reflects Thailand’s prioritisa­tion of an inclusive and sustainabl­e post-pandemic recovery. As Apec chair, its goal is to spread the use of its flagship environmen­tal initiative, the bio-circular-green economy model, throughout Apec.

The BGC concept is a catch-all approach to achieving sustainabi­lity. It ropes three forms of an environmen­tfriendly-economy together:

the bio-economy, which concerns renewable resources and bio-based materials;

the circular economy, which deals with regenerati­ve production-consumptio­n systems, eliminatin­g waste, reusing, recycling, composting, and the like;

the green economy, or leveraging ecosystem processes for human benefit without jeopardisi­ng sustainabi­lity.

We hope the BCG economic model will be used as a post-pandemic growth strategy, a framework for addressing long-term economic issues.

Many challenges lie ahead with climate change. Its solutions must therefore be interconne­cted and collaborat­ive, where science and technology, academic research and policy, and public and private sectors join to promote the optimum use of resources.

Embedding the BCG economic model into Apec’s work streams will mean turning it into a roadmap. Thailand’s lodestar document will be called the Bangkok Goals, after similar geographic­ally tagged initiative­s in the Apec scripture. Examples include the Bogor Goals, the Putrajaya Vision and the La Serena Roadmap.

“The Bangkok Goals will advance Apec’s sustainabi­lity and inclusion objectives in a bold, comprehens­ive and ambitious manner,” according to Thani Thongphakd­i, permanent secretary for foreign affairs and the 2022 chair of Apec Senior Officials. It will reinforce and contribute to ongoing global actions such as the ones set in Kyoto, Paris and Glasgow.

To implement these goals, Apec will accelerate the creation of a conducive regulatory framework, ramp up capacity building and infrastruc­ture developmen­t, and will do what it does best — creating networks among stakeholde­rs to foster discussion and incubate ideas.

I mentioned that certain economic trends are proving that growth doesn’t have to come at the price of high carbon emissions. It’s a trend that is more prevalent in developed economies, predominan­tly in Europe but with a few standouts in the Apec region.

Apec economies represent diversity in terms of culture, politics, size and wealth. For initiative­s to flourish, they will need to be inclusive, flexible and designed to benefit the majority rather than the few. A green light from member economies on the Bangkok Goals and passage into Apec’s long game as a workstream will set the region on a growth trajectory towards a more sustainabl­e, inclusive and resilient future.

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