Sustainable trade and investment key to Asia and Pacific’s green future: ADB
While trade and investment have fueled remarkable economic growth in Asia in recent decades, it has also led to large increases in carbon dioxide emissions in the region—which is more vulnerable to the effects of climate change than any other.
"Reversing this trend will require measures such as promoting trade in environmental goods and services, nurturing green businesses, developing carbon pricing mechanisms, and strengthening regional cooperation through trade and investment agreements," according to the Asian Economic Integration Report (AEIR) 2023, released by ADB yesterday.
"Asia and the Pacific's remarkable growth has lifted millions of people out of poverty, but this has come at an environmental cost," said ADB Chief Economist Albert Park in a press release.
The region now finds itself on the frontline of the climate crisis, which can derail development progress. Trade and investment remain as one of the most important drivers for growth and poverty reduction, but governments in the region need to intensify their cooperation to make trade and investment greener."
Asia's production-related carbon dioxide emissions almost tripled between 1995 and 2019, largely reflecting the region's unparalleled pace of economic growth and industrialisation to satisfy demand—both within the region and in export markets.
Asia and the Pacific is now warming faster than any part of the world. Almost 40 per cent of the world's disasters occur in the region, and more than 70 per cent of people affected by disasters live in Asia and the Pacific. Disasters disproportionately affect women and vulnerable populations.
According to the report, governments in the region can make trade and investment more sustainable and greener by promoting the trade of environmental goods, such as solar panels, and services; nurturing green businesses through regulations, incentives, standards, and certification systems; enhancing international regulatory cooperation to make climate commitments and actions transparent, firm, interoperable, and collaborative; and developing carbon pricing mechanisms at both national and cross-border levels, through linkages and regional alliances.
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