Historias

Climate change, the World Bank and A4T (en)

5 febrero 2013
ITC Noticias

According to media reports, last month the new President of the World Bank Jim Yong Kim, spent 7 of his 10 minutes speech at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos warning business executives about the impending catastrophe of climate change. This comes on the back of President Obama promising in his Inauguration on 21st January that "We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations."


World Bank President Jim Yong Kim
Image: World Bank

In the Washington Post, the Kim paints a bleak picture of a 4C world with failing food production, extreme weather and flooded out coastal areas. Kim alludes to the initial aim of the Bretton Woods Institutions being to avoid a third world war. He says that the world now needs “a bold global approach to help avoid the climate catastrophe it faces today”.
Many agencies and governments already has climate at the heart of their policy making. However, the Bank’s words provides welcome support to scientists and advocates for climate action. They will also help influence “late adoptors” of climate policies and reduce the credibility further of climate deniers.
In the Aid for Trade business, climate and biodiversity still sit on the margins. The issue did not make it onto the agenda of a recent OECD meeting on the subject. As a first step, it will be useful to look at how climate can be “mainstreamed” into Aid for Trade. (Jargon alert!) “Mainstreaming” here means assessing how climate has been integrated into the design and implementation of A4T delivery – and how it can be strengthened so that A4T delivery is “climate proofed” but also address key trade related climate issues, like for example threats to infrastructure and productive capacity, particularly in agriculture.
The Global Review of A4T at the WTO in July can be an opportunity for beneficiary countries and donors to discuss this aspect of A4T delivery.
Links this week on climate
1. What we tell our children about climate change from Jo Romm on Climate Progress:
He hopes that he can say: “I did everything I could…I did my darndest…” but fears that society in the 2030s will look at the catastrophe unfolding around them (4 ft sea rises, dustbowls over agricultural areas) and say that we could have done more, earlier on, to stop climate change.
2. IFPRI says that food production will be hit by up to 20% in Asia and the Pacific by 2050.
3. Nicholas Stern says at Davos “I got it wrong about climate change. It’s far,far worse”