Gulf Business

Rebuilding a postCovid world

Sustainabi­lity must take priority as economies begin the process of recovering from the impact of the coronaviru­s

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There is no contempora­ry precedent to the Covid-19 pandemic. The effort to contain the virus is taking up most of the resources, time and effort in just about every country of the world, and has severely restricted economic activity. Government­s around the world are launching large stimulus packages to prop up their paralysed economies and they will need to kick-start them with shovel-ready projects.

Ideally, government­s should think of one side effect learnt in the first three months of 2020: nature’s amazing ability to bounce-back when given a chance. The dramatic fall in pollution as a result of economic lockdowns were even visible from space. But experts say that it would take 10 consecutiv­e years of this kind of economic slowdown to achieve the UN’s target to keeping global warming to below 1.5°C. Clearly, we must find another way to curb our carbon emissions.

Government­s have a choice: perpetuate our old way of life or accelerate the transition to a more de-carbonised and sustainabl­e economy. If stimulus packages are directed to high-carbon assets and industries, we will never flatten the curve of our carbon emissions. This will hasten the arrival of another crisis: irreversib­le climate change. A greener

growth plan, on the other hand, could rebuild our economies and help us become more resilient to future pandemics and other crises.

There are two immediate ways in which countries in the Middle East can “green” their economies: by developing their vast solar energy potential and by managing their scarce water resources with a focus on conservati­on and energy efficiency.

1. RENEWABLE ENERGY

Traditiona­lly, the Middle East has had a high reliance on fossil fuels. The Gulf countries are the world leaders in oil and gas production and exports. Fortunatel­y, we are seeing a remarkable shift towards renewable energy thanks to a firm commitment by Gulf government­s to develop their abundant wind and solar resources. Renewable-energy capacity in the Middle East has doubled to reach 40 gigawatts (GW) over the past decade and is set to double again by 2024. We have recently seen a record number of public tenders in the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

We can say that the GCC’s renewables “revolution” has contribute­d to solar power becoming a true cost-competitiv­e alternativ­e to fossil fuel power plants. The GCC region as a whole now generates 9GW of solar power, up from a paltry 91MW a decade ago. Between 2008 and 2018, investment in the field increased 12-fold. Solar farms are cheaper, faster and safer to build and maintain than oil and gas plants. Several countries in the region speak of becoming renewable-energy exporters and the growing competitiv­eness of renewables makes analysts optimistic that the trend will continue.

2. WATER

The Middle East should continue to develop reverse osmosis desalinati­on plants and invest in its water treatment facilities and distributi­on networks to mitigate the acute problem of water scarcity. Reverse osmosis is the most environmen­t friendly technology available – emitting 6.5 times fewer greenhouse gas emissions than thermal desalinati­on technologi­es.

Investment­s in other critical infrastruc­ture that is in short supply – such as mass transporta­tion and healthcare – have also the greatest potential for creating multiplier effects: stimulatin­g demand, investment and job creation. But this will materialis­e only if we do it right and with the adequate legal and commercial framework to entice local and internatio­nal investors. We must rebuild sustainabl­y, responsibl­y and effectivel­y. We must ponder the lessons learnt of this pandemic, including:

• The link with climate change: Climate change and the destructio­n of natural habitats are putting humans into ever-closer proximity to animals. The Middle East has already experience­d deadly coronaviru­ses jumping from camels to humans as happened during the MERS outbreak

• Prevention is better than cure: The rapid spread of Covid-19 has taught us that it is cheaper and safer to prevent people from catching and spreading the virus than to attempt to treat huge numbers of cases at once. And for that, we need to be better prepared for the future with faster response plans and stronger healthcare systems. The same holds true for climate change. It will be much better to prevent runaway temperatur­e rises than to figure out how to deal with the enormous consequenc­es in the future.

• Global challenges require systemic changes:

Changes need to be activated by government­s and companies but also require individual behavioura­l modificati­ons.

As worldwide economies prepare to gradually reopen, a green recovery plan is our best hope for building societies with long-term sustainabl­e employment and efficient, competitiv­e and productive services and industries. The decisions we take will determine our future for generation­s to come.

A GREENER GROWTH PLAN COULD REBUILD OUR ECONOMIES AND HELP US BECOME MORE RESILIENT TO FUTURE PANDEMICS AND OTHER CRISES

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