Hoffmann, Ulrich (2015) Can Green Growth Really Work and what are the True (Socio-)Economics of Climate Change? Discussion Paper, no. 222, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), CH-Geneva .
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Summary in the original language of the document
Many economists and policy makers advocate a fundamental shift towards "green growth" as the new, qualitatively-different growth paradigm, largely based on enhanced material/resource/energy efficiency, structural changes towards a service-dominated economy and a switch in the energy mix favouring renewable forms of energy.
"Green growth" may work well in creating new growth impulses with reduced environmental load and facilitating related technological and structural change. But can it also mitigate climate change at the required scale (i.e. significant, absolute and permanent decline of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions at global level) and pace (i.e. in no more than two decades)?
This paper argues that growth, technological, population-expansion and governance constraints as well as some key systemic issues cast a very long shadow on the "green growth" hopes. One should not deceive oneself into believing that such an evolutionary (and often reductionist) approach will be sufficient to cope with the complexities of climate change. It may rather give much false hope and excuses to do nothing really fundamental that should bring about a U-turn of global GHG emissions. The proponents of a resource efficiency revolution, re-structuring of economies and a drastic change in the energy mix need to scrutinize the historical evidence, in particular the arithmetic of economic and population growth. Furthermore, they need to realize that the required transformation goes far beyond innovation and structural changes to include better distribution of income and wealth, limitation of market power of economic agents that promote biased approaches to GHG reduction, and a culture of sufficiency.
Climate change calls into question the global equality of opportunity for prosperity (i.e. ecological justice and development space) and is thus a huge developmental challenge for all countries, but particularly for the global South and a question of life and death for some developing countries.
EPrint Type: | Working paper |
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Keywords: | Department of International Cooperation, climate, |
Subjects: | Food systems > Policy environments and social economy Environmental aspects |
Research affiliation: | Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > International Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Sustainability > Climate International Organizations > United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD |
Related Links: | http://www.fibl.org/en/switzerland/development.html |
Deposited By: | Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau, FiBL |
ID Code: | 29947 |
Deposited On: | 22 Mar 2016 09:59 |
Last Modified: | 04 Nov 2020 15:05 |
Document Language: | English |
Status: | Published |
Refereed: | Not peer-reviewed |
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