The UB Post

TOWARDS A RESOURCE EFFICIENT AND POLLUTION FREE ASIA-PACIFIC

- By SHAMSHAD AKHTAR and ERIK SOLHEIM Shamshad Akhtar is the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. Erik Solheim is the Executive Director of the United Nations Environmen­t Programme.

Senior government officials from across Asia and the Pacific will meet in Bangkok this week for the first-ever Asia-Pacific Ministeria­l Summit on the Environmen­t. The highlevel meeting is coconvened by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UN ESCAP) and UN Environmen­t and is a unique opportunit­y for the region’s environmen­t leaders to discuss how they can work together towards a resource efficient and pollution-free Asia-Pacific.

At the core of the meeting is the question: how can we use our resources more efficientl­y to continue to grow our economies in a manner that does not tax our natural environmen­t or generate pollution affecting public health and ecosystem health. There is certainly much room for improvemen­t to make in this area.

Resources such as fossil fuels, biomass, metals and minerals are essential to build economies. However, the region’s resource efficiency has regressed in recent years. Asia is unfortunat­ely the least resource efficient region in the world. In 2015, we used one third more materials to produce each unit of GDP than in 1990. Developing countries use five times as many resources per dollar of GDP in comparison to rest of the world and 10 times more than industrial­ized countries in the region. This inefficien­cy of resource use results into wastage and pollution further affecting the natural resources and public health which are the basic elements for ensuring sustainabl­e economic growth.

As the speed and scale of economic growth continues to accelerate across the region, pollution has become a critical area for action. While the challenge of pollution is a global one, the impacts are overwhelmi­ngly felt in developing countries. About 95 percent of adults and children who are impacted by pollutionr­elated illnesses live in low and middle-income countries. Asia and the Pacific produces more chemicals and waste than any other region in the world and accounts for the bulk – 25 out of 30 – of cities with highest levels of PM 2.5, the tiny atmospheri­c particulat­e matter that can cause respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular diseases and cancer. More than 80 percent of our rivers are heavily polluted while five of the top land-based ocean plastic sources are from countries in our region. Estimates put the cost of marine pollution to regional economies at a staggering 1.3 billion USD.

If left unattended, these trends threaten to up end hardwon economic gains and hamper human developmen­t. But while these challenges appear intractabl­e, the region has tremendous strengths and opportunit­ies to draw from. Many countries hold solid track records of successful economic transforma­tion. The capacity for promoting environmen­tal sustainabi­lity as an integral pillar of sustainabl­e developmen­t must now be developed across all countries in the region

There are some profound changes underway in Asia and the Pacific. The region is experienci­ng the largest rural to urban migration in history. Developing these new urban areas with resource-efficient buildings, waste water and solid waste management systems can do much to advance this agenda. Advancing the “sharing economy” might mean we have better utilizatio­n of assets such as vehicles, houses or other assets, greatly reducing material inputs and pollution. The widespread move to renewable energy should rein in fossil fuel use. And advances in recycling, materials technology, 3D printing and manufactur­ing could also support greater resource circularit­y.

Moving to green technologi­es and eco innovation offer economic and employment opportunit­ies. Renewable energy provided jobs for 9.8 million people worldwide in 2016. Waste can be converted into economic opportunit­ies, including jobs. In Cebu City – the secondlarg­est city in the Philippine­s, concerted Solid Waste Management has borne fruit: waste has been reduced by 30 percent in 2012; treatment of organic waste in neighborho­ods has led to lower transporta­tion costs and longer use period in landfills. The poor have largely benefited from hundreds of jobs that have been created.

At the policy level, it is vital that resource efficiency and pollution prevention targets are integrated into national developmen­t agendas, and targeted legal and regulatory measures to enforce resource efficiency standards should be establishe­d. For example, the Government of China has instituted a national system of legislatio­n, rules and regulation­s that led to the adoption of a compulsory national cleaner production audit system that has been in place for more than 10 years. The direct economic benefits from this system are estimated to be more than three billion USD annually.

Further, we need an urgent reform of financial instrument­s. Too little capital is supporting the transition to green and resource efficient economy – major portion of current investment­s is still in highcarbon and resourcein­tensive, polluting economies. Polluter pay principle and environmen­tal externalit­ies are not yet fully integrated into pricing mechanisms and investment models. The availabili­ty of innovative financing mechanisms and integrated evaluation methods are important for upscaling and replicatin­g resource-efficient practices. For example, the largescale promotion of biogas plants in Viet Nam was made possible by harnessing global climate finance funds. Several countries in the region area are already emerging as leaders in the developmen­t of comprehens­ive, systemic approaches that embed sustainabl­e finance at the heart of financial market developmen­t, such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka, and we should draw from the positive lessons learned from these experience­s.

Resource efficiency and pollution prevention must be recognized as an important target for action by science, technologi­cal and innovation systems. This is important for the ongoing developmen­t of technology, and for scaling up technologi­es. Research shows that developing countries could cut their annual energy demand by more than half, from 3.4 percent to 1.4 percent, over the next 12 years. This would leave energy consumptio­n some 22 percent lower than it would otherwise have been – an abatement equivalent to the entire energy consumptio­n in China today.

We need to move to a more resource efficient and pollution free growth path that supports and promotes healthy environmen­ts. The cost of inaction for managing resources efficientl­y and preventing pollution is too high and a threat to economies, livelihood­s and health across the region.

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