
AP Photo/Michel Euler
by Andrew Light and Rebecca Lefton
G-20 leaders of the world’s major economies who are meeting this week in France will be scrambling to deal with economic emergencies rippling across Europe, rising unemployment, and stagnating economic growth. But these leaders must also take up climate change, which will become more costly the longer we wait to deal with it. They can seize on the challenge of global warming to generate economic growth and enshrine a path for environmentally sustainable development. Specifically, they should use this forum to create revenue generators for financing used for climate change adaptation and mitigation as recommended by the World Bank. And they should advance a second international climate finance period. Both of these steps would do much to ensure necessary global warming emissions reductions.
Growing greenhouse gas pollution will lead to more frequent and intense natural disasters, droughts, rising food prices, water shortages, and the devastation of natural resources that are necessary to sustain livelihoods and the global economy. Experts agree that greenhouse gas emissions must be cut in half to limit a temperature increase of 2 degrees Celsius, which is the level necessary to avoid the worst impacts of global warming.
The assembled G-20 parties asked the World Bank in April to give them a plan to pay for an adequate response to address global warming. The World Bank responded. Now the assembled parties must take these recommendations and formulate a plan to implement them.


