Showing posts with label green economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green economy. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Publication: The State of Sustainability Initiatives Review 2014: Standards and the Green Economy (23 March 2014)


The State of Sustainability Initiatives Review 2014: Standards and the Green Economy

» Jason Potts, Matthew Lynch, Ann Wilkings, Gabriel A. Huppé, Maxine Cunningham, Vivek Voora, IISD, 2014.Book, 365 pages, copyright: IISD and IIED, ISBN 978-1-894784-45-0

The State of Sustainability Initiatives Review 2014 provides a bird’s-eye view of market and performance trends across 16 of the most prevalent standards initiatives operating across ten different commodity sectors. The Review represents one small effort toward strengthening our understanding of how voluntary sustainability standards are developing over time, both in terms of the systems they deploy and the market impacts that they have. It is hoped that the ensuing data and analysis, when read in conjunction with the growing body of field-level impact data, will allow supply chain decision-makers to strengthen their own strategic decision-making processes in ways that provide optimal sustainable development impact.

PDF



  • Hard copy not available.


source from: http://www.iisd.org/publications/pub.aspx?pno=2899

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

China News: UN highlights China's progress on 'greening' its finance sector (4 Feb 2014)

UN highlights China's progress on 'greening' its finance sector

Jakob Thomä

article image
China is the only major economy that has begun to integrate climate constraints into financial regulation (Image by Jeff)
 
Christiana Figueres, chief climate official of the United Nations, caused a stir with her comments that China is 'doing it right' in terms of climate change policies, given that the country is the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

She supported this claim by saying that China has some of the toughest energy-efficiency standards for buildings and transportation and is a big supporter of photovoltaic technology. But China’s role in expanding the policy spectrum in terms of what are ‘feasible’ instruments for fighting climate change has also been underappreciated. Nowhere is this more true than in the area of financial regulation.

China is the only major economy that has begun to integrate climate constraints into financial regulation (unless one counts Fiji as a major economy, where the central bank has stipulated mandatory lending requirements for its banks). While these new regulatory policies are still in a development phase, they set the stage for comprehensive regulatory reform designed to decarbonise the Chinese financial sector.

The most notable of these policies have been the “Green Credit Policies”, first issued in 2007, then revamped in 2012 as “Green Credit Guidelines”. While many of the green credit policies are recommendations on process (as opposed to outcome), they are starting to be relevant. Banks now need to report on Key Performance Indicators related to the “Green Credit Guidelines”.

Failure to comply by mid-level managers can be grounds for the Chinese Banking and Regulatory Commission (CBRC), the Chinese financial regulator, to prevent appointments to senior positions within the Chinese state-owned banks. Although the CBRC has yet to make use of this power, this could be a game-changer in terms of managers’ behaviour and future compliance.

Defining what is green

Although the international focus has been on Green Credit Guidelines, a range of additional measures have been implemented. All Chinese banks have to report any legal environmental liabilities connected with their investment and a number of additional ‘environmental indicators’ to the CBRC.

The European equivalent would be if Deutsche Bank, in addition to its financial reporting, reported environmental indicators and legal risks to BaFin, the German financial regulator, or eventually the European Central Bank. While Chinese banks are currently struggling with issues related to accounting and monitoring, particularly in terms of defining what is ‘green’, over time this reporting will become more sophisticated.

Interestingly, new public environmental disclosure requirements for certain industries in China suggest that public disclosure for the financial sector is on the horizon. Indeed, the reporting related to companies’ environmental performance already has regulatory consequences for the financial system. Chinese companies in certain industries will now face an environmental credit rating based on a four-colour scale. Beginning in March, banks are discouraged from lending to companies with a “red” (the worst) rating.

It is too early to speak of a revolution: many of these policies are still being developed, fine-tuned, and expanded. At this stage it is stilldifficult to assess the actual impact of these policies. As an example, investment in coal in China grew 10% on average over the past decade, although it has already begun to level off since last year. This suggests that the Chinese financial system is still ‘high-carbon’.

Regulatory policies such as lending limits to the real estate sector may have even run counter to incentives for investments in energy-efficiency. At the same time, these measures are leaps and bounds ahead of European and US policy, which seem to ignore the question of ‘greening’ financial regulation entirely.

Financial regulation has a significant role to play in ‘levelling the playing field’ for climate-friendly investments, an issue Chinese policies are beginning to address.

Of course, the actual regulatory instruments mobilised to ‘green’ the financial system may be very different, depending on the respective financial system parameters and constituencies. In Europe, for example, tax incentives for savings’ interest, which already are being used to channel investment, may be the most immediate lever available to policymakers to incentivise climate-friendly investments.

A number of different actors including the 2° Investing Initiative,Climate Bonds Initiative, and Carbon Tracker have put forward regulatory policy proposals. The European Commission is exploring the topic of ‘mobilising private capital for climate-friendly investment’. In that respect, Christiana Figueres’ comments undoubtedly hit the right tone. In terms of greening financial regulation, China is not only “doing it right”, but paving the way.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Publication: Policy Brief Green Economy For Sustainable Development: Japan Should Lead The Policy Shift Towards Global Poverty Alleviation (17 Nov 2013)

Green Economy for Sustainable Development: Japan should lead the policy shift towards global poverty alleviation
Policy Brief

Green Economy For Sustainable Development: Japan Should Lead The Policy Shift Towards Global Poverty Alleviation

 Vol. / Issue: Vol. 12
Author: Kojima, SatoshiKabaya, Kei and Yano, Takashi
Policy Brief | 2011/06 | Language: English
Publisher: IGES(Hayama) | Copyright: IGES | Page No./Total No. of Pages: p.8.

This policy brief explores the debate on the green economy concept for the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD), to be held in Rio de Janeiro in 2012, and covers initiatives in various countries. It also makes a proposal on the vital role of Japan in linking green economy policies from developed countries to global sustainable development.

Download:File nameSize
pb_12_e_final.pdf919 KB
Area:Green Economy
Task:Other
Tag:Policy Brief
Region:AsiaJapan

source from: http://pub.iges.or.jp/modules/envirolib/view.php?docid=3286

Monday, November 11, 2013

Event: Course on Community Investment Strategy and Impact Measurement by Asia CSR (14 Nov 2013)

Community Investment Strategy and Impact Measurement (Half Day)

Date:Thursday, 14 November 2013
Location:Singapore

Course Overview:
Time: 1.30pm - 5.30pm
A company’s community investment should add value for communities and for the business. This interactive and participatory workshop is designed to give attendees the background and tools to deliver a strategic community investment project. The session will examine approaches to community investment, measurement lessons learned and case studies including engaging employees in the whole process.  There will also be a focus on monitoring and evaluation and measuring for outcomes and impact. The course will use the innovative “CSR Asia Community Investment Scorecard” tool used by a number of CSR Asia clients.
  • Learn about best practice in companies' contributions to communities
  • Identify opportunities and strategic partnerships which make sense for your company
  • Engage community stakeholders
  • Understand how employee volunteering can play a role
  • Learn how to measure inputs, outputs and impact through internationally recognised frameworks
Course Leaders:
Mabel Wong
biography
Erin Lyon
biography
Fee:USD 240

Registration:
For CSR Asia Strategic Partners (to enjoy special discount)
For Ordinary
CSR Asia Strategic Partners are entitled to a 20% discount on all courses organised by CSR Asia. To register using your free training pass, please contact your relationship manager directly.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Publication: Green Revenues for Green Energy: Environmental fiscal reform for renewable energy technology deployment in China ( Oct 2013)

IISD Publications Centre

Green Revenues for Green Energy: Environmental fiscal reform for renewable energy technology deployment in China

» Jacqueline Cottrell, Richard Bridle, Zhao Yongqiang, Shi Jingli, Xie Xuxuan, Christopher Beaton,Aaron Leopold, Eike Meyer, Shruti Sharma, Han Cheng, 2013.Paper
China’s economy continues to grow rapidly with corresponding increases in both energy consumption and environmental pollution. Renewable energy is a key part of China’s response to this challenge. The current costs of measures to facilitate the large-scale deployment of renewable energy are primarily met through an electricity surcharge—effectively a tax on electricity consumption. However, concerns have been raised that continuing to rely on the surcharge alone places a disproportionate burden on electricity consumers. In response, the need for further debate on how best to fund renewable energy and reduce environmental pollution was identified by the IISD and the CNREC, leading to the establishment of a research project to examine the international experience of similar schemes and their relevance to China. This report presents a summary for policy-makers of the findings of that research.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

New Books: Greening India's Growth Costs, Valuations and Trade-offs Edited by Muthukumara Mani (26 Sep 2013)

Greening India's Growth

Costs, Valuations and Trade-offs

Edited by Muthukumara Mani

Routledge – 2014 – 194 pages

Descriptions:
India’s sustained and rapid economic growth offers an opportunity to lift millions out of poverty. But this may come at a steep cost to its environment and natural resources. This insightful book analyses India’s growth from an economic perspective and assesses whether India can grow in a "green" and sustainable manner. Three key issues are addressed.
The first is the physical and monetary costs and losses of environmental health and natural resources driven by economic growth. The authors undertake a monetary valuation and quantification of environmental damage, using techniques that have been developed to better understand and quantify preferences and values of individuals and communities in the context of environmental quality, conservation of natural resources, and environmental health risks. The second part estimates the value of ecosystem services from the major biomes in India using state-of-the art methods with a view to preserving them for the future. The third section provides a menu of policy instruments to explore trade-offs between economic growth and environmental sustainability using a Computable General Equilibrium approach with particular attention to air pollution.
The conclusions focus on the way forward in terms of policies, measures and instruments as India has to balance the twin challenges of maintaining economic prosperity while managing its environmental resources.

Contents:
1. Growth vs. Environment Debate
2. How much does it Cost?
3. How to Value?
4. What are the Trade-offs?
5. Way Forward: Striving for Green Growth
Annex 1: Methodology of Environmental Health Losses Valuation
Annex 2: Methodology for Estimating the Cost of Natural Resource Degradation
Annex 3: Details of the Meta-Analysis Functions used in Estimating Value of Ecosystem Services
Annex 4: Description of the CGE Model

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Publications: Industrial Policy for a Green Economy » Johannes Schwarzer, IISD, (Sep 2013)

IISD Publications Centre

Industrial Policy for a Green Economy» Johannes Schwarzer, IISD, 2013.Paper, 68 pages, copyright: IISD
This report draws from the long history of industrial policy to highlight lessons for governments looking to promote infant green industries. It shows what we know about how to do industrial policy—both negative and positive lessons—and explores the nature of green industrial policy, asking if it is any different than traditional industrial policy.

Paper































Sunday, September 8, 2013

Events: Beyond Rio +20: Emerging Challenges and Opportunities organized by UNU-INRA, IPAR Senegal and ISSER, University of Ghana from 20-22 Nov 2013

Beyond Rio +20: Emerging Challenges and Opportunities

DATE / TIME :
2013•11•20 - 2013•11•22
LOCATION :
Accra

The United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on 20–22 June 2012, released an outcome document entitled “The Future We Want” — a compromise of participating countries who strive to promote a green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication.
One of the most notable outcomes of the conference was a decision to launch s set of “Sustainable Development Goals” (SDGs). This has triggered many consultation processes on the post-MDGs (Millennium Development Goals) taking place globally, which will certainly lead to a development agenda that takes into account the Rio+20 outcomes. It is, therefore, important to keep tracking the various activities related to the future of the MDGs.
The Initiative Prospective Agricole et Rurale (IPAR Senegal), Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER, University of Ghana) and United Nations University Institute for Natural Resources in Africa (UNU-INRA) will organizing a conference in Accra, Ghana, from 18–22 November 2013, with support from the International Development Research Center (IDRC), on the theme “Beyond Rio + 20: Emerging Challenges and Opportunities”.
The conference intends to assemble several African think tanks to share views on the post-Rio+20 world, to deepen our understanding of the challenges and opportunities ahead and to lay the foundations of a collective reflection on the ways to better implement the Rio+20 outcomes within Africa. This initiative will contribute to strengthening the research capacities of the think tanks, improve their policy linkages and connect their voices to the global development agenda. The event also will bring together prominent policymakers and civil society representatives who can help connect Africa to the reflection on inclusive green growth, and contribute to mobilizing political will throughout the continent and better incorporating the voice of Africa in this global policy debate.
This bilingual (English and French) conference is designed in a diversified format with panel discussions, presentations by keynote speakers and session papers. Outputs expected from the conference include (i) an edited book capturing the best outputs of the programme, (ii) research papers related to the post Rio+20 gathering, which may be published in a special issue, and (iii) policy briefs on specific and relevant topics.
The conference is open to the public and admission is free.
The costs of participation at the conference will be covered for a limited number of invited speakers and selected papers. However, participants who can support themselves are encouraged to apply.
Prospective authors should send their abstract of no more than 600 words to Ibrahima Hathie, IPAR Senegal (ihathie@gmail.com) and Felix Ankomah Asante, ISSER, University of Ghana (fasante@ug.edu.gh) by 24 August 2013. The deadline for the full papers will be 31 October 2013.
For more information:

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Events: International Forum for Sustainable Asia and the Pacific: ISAP 2013 organized by IGES and UNU-IAS on 23-24 Jul 2013


  • ISAP 2013

    Paving the Way for a Sustainable Asia-Pacific: Regional Perspectives on Green Economy

  • The Asia-Pacific region leads the global economy as a centre of growth, and urgently need to shift from the traditional twentieth century type of industrial development known as “Brown Economy” to a “Green Economy” underpinned by low-carbon development, improving resource-efficiency and achieving well-being for all.

    ISAP2013 will focus on incorporation of sustainability concepts into business practices, local initiatives for smart cities and emerging networks of researchers for low-carbon development. Discussions will be held with diverse stakeholders focusing on sustainable development.

    We look forward to seeing you in Yokohama where researchers and likeminded participants will gather from all over the world.

    Registration Starts on 24 June, 2013(Monday) from 10:00 a.m.!
  • TitlePaving the Way for a Sustainable Asia-Pacific: Regional Perspectives on Green Economy
    Date23-24 July 2013 (Tue./Wed.)
    1st day: 23 July 9:30-18:00 (9:00 open)
    2nd day: 24 July 10:00-17:30 (9:30 open)
    VenuePACIFICO YOKOHAMA, Conference Center 5F
    1-1-1 Minato Mirai, Nishi-ku, Yokohama 220-0012, Japan >>access
    OrganisersInstitute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES)
    United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU-IAS)
    Collaborators (tentative)United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP),
    United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP),
    Asian Development Bank (ADB)
    Supporters (tentative)Ministry of the Environment, Japan; Kanagawa Prefectural Government; Hyogo Prefectural Government; City of Yokohama; City of Kawasaki; City of Kitakyushu; The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI); National Institute for Environmental Studies; Yokohama National University; Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN); Sustainability Science Consortium;
    FeeFree of charge
    *Those who wish to participate in the lunch session are requested to pay JPY500 for a boxed lunch
    LanguageEnglish/Japanese with simultaneous interpretation

  • Session Topics (tentative)

    "3Rs and improved Resource Efficiency"
    "How to narrow the target gap 2 °C through Green House Gas reduction in Asia"
    "Smart Cities: Inter-Cities Cooperation for Realising Low-carbon Society"
    "Climate Change: Future Prospect and Current Status", and more


    Speakers (tentative)

     - Dr. Ron Benioff, Co- Director, Low Emissions Development Strategies Global Partnership
     - Prof. Dr. Raimund Bleischwitz, Co-Director, Material Flows and Resource Management, Wuppertal Research Institute
     - Dr. Bindu N. Lohani, Vice President, Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development, Asian Development Bank
     - Dr. Rajendra K. Pachauri, Chair, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
     - Prof. Kazuhiko Takeuchi, Senior Vice-Rector, UNU
     - Prof. Kazuhiro Ueta, Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies & Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University
     - Dr. Abdul Hamid Zakri, Science Advisor to the Prime Minister of Malaysia, and others 


For more information: http://www.iges.or.jp/isap/2013/en/index.html

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Publications: BioTrade: Harnessing the potential for transitioning to a green economy - The Case of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants in Nepal by UNEP (28 Feb 2013)

Growing Demand for Medicinal Plants Can Create Green Jobs for Nepal's Poor

Nairobi/Geneva, 28 February 2013 - The growing global demand for medicinal and aromatic plants could help drive Nepal's green economy, while improving livelihoods in its poorest communities, according to a new study released by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in collaboration with the Government of Nepal.

The report, BioTrade: Harnessing the potential for transitioning to a green economy - The Case of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants in Nepal, analyzes the country's BioTrade sector and, specifically, its trade in Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs), which are often grown in the country's poorest regions.

Nepal is home to about 700 species of medicinal plants, about 250 of which are endemic to the country. This vast haven of biodiversity presents opportunities in commodity BioTrade (essential oils and plants extracts, natural ingredients for cosmetics and pharmaceutical products, native fruits for juice, wine and jam), trade in goods (bamboo products, gums and resins, spices and flavours, dyes and tans, natural pesticides, wild mushrooms and health foods), and services (ecotourism).

Today, more than 100 types of MAPs are harvested in Nepal and traded in international markets. In 2008, the recorded value of the exported MAPs was around USD 3 million, and by 2009, it had increased to USD 9.8 million.

"The growing global demand for natural and environmentally-friendly products today, speaks of the vast potential of BioTrade to contribute to the strengthening of the country's economy and rural livelihoods," said Lal Mani Joshi, Secretary of Nepal's Ministry of Commerce and Supplies.

Given Nepal's high degree of biodiversity, the study confirmed the country's significant potential to develop its BioTrade sector. The study focuses on the cultivation, processing and trade of high-value MAPs, which are found in the forests and grasslands of the mountains in the northern part of the country.

"By harvesting these plants sustainably, and improving their value-added activity so collectors receive a fair share of the profits, the trade could contribute to social equity, environmental conservation and economic prosperity," said UNEP Programme Officer Asad Naqvi, who oversaw the study.

However, the report also cites the challenges of developing a sustainable trade in MAPs, including the lack of value-added activity and quality control mechanisms. MAPs are currently sold through long marketing channels with high transaction costs and most of the value-added processes in the production chain occur outside of Nepal.

In addition, inadequate infrastructure, such as limited access to electricity, transportation facilities, water and technology, results in a lack of productive capacity and hampers developing the trade in MAPs.

The report makes several recommendations to assist policymakers, development agencies and entrepreneurs in developing the country's BioTrade in MAPs in a responsible and sustainable manner.
For example, the report cites a need for:

- An inventory system, with regular updating, to provide much needed information on the stock of available resources and how much can be sustainably harvested.

- Appropriate technologies for transforming Nepali raw materials into value-added products.

- Well-equipped laboratories to test plants and products in order to meet sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS) requirements and provide easy access to lucrative international markets.

- Implementation of appropriate policies that facilitate adequate incentives for entrepreneurs to promote and encourage formal trade in MAPs.

The study is part of Capacity Building for BioTrade (CBBT) project, which is implemented by UNEP with financial support from GIZ, and has conducted similar studies in Namibia and Peru.

The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), the Ministry of Commerce and Supplies, the Ministry of Environment, the Ministry of Forestry and Soil Conservation, and National Planning Commission of Nepal also contributed to this study.

Further Resources
For more information: 
http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=2704&ArticleID=9428&l=en&t=long

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Chinese Updates: China key in move to green economy, global leaders told at Davos (21 Jan 2013)


China key in move to green economy, global leaders told at Davos

Simon Zadek

21.01.2013

Global and business elite receive stark warning at Davos – extra $700 billion must be spent greening infrastructure investments by 2030 to avoid dangerous climate change.
article image
Renewable investments are threatened by government cut-backs: Germany, the UK and Spain have reduced solar PV subsidies, and US wind installations are falling. (Image by Seattle.roamer)

The world needs to spend a massive US$5 trillion a year on infrastructure to keep up with transport, energy and water needs, says a coalition of institutions including the OECD and World Bank.
That’s equivalent to the combined GDPs of the France and the UK, each and every year.
But finding the cash isn’t the only challenge, warn the authors of the report Green Investment, who are set to present their findings at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos this week, the world`s largest annual jamboree for business and politicians.
If the world is to avoid a dangerous rise in temperatures of 4oC or more in coming decades, much of the investment must be low-carbon and resource-light, says the Green Growth Action Alliance, which also includes Bloomberg New Energy Finance, the Climate Policy Initiative and the World Economic Forum.
China and other developing nations need to be part of this shift from brown to green investment for the numbers to add up, explains the report, which was published today. The World Resources Institute estimates that China and India alone account for 76% of the 1,199 new coal-fired power plants currently proposed globally.
Green investment costs more, at least in the short term. The Alliance`s report puts the extra cost, globally, at US$700 billion a year, with almost half of that needed to cover the added costs of buildings and industrial efficiency measures, and another 20% to green the estimated US$15 trillion investment in energy generation needed by 2020.
These incremental costs are insignificant compared to the damage to economies, communities and nations of unrestrained climate change, or rising and volatile commodity prices, especially food. However, someone still needs to put up the extra money. So where will it come from?
Mobilising the private sector
 
Global investment in renewable energy has risen six-fold since 2004. But the numbers remain far too small. Moreover, future renewable investments are threatened by government cut-backs. Germany, the UK and Spain have reduced solar PV subsidies. Wind installations in the US are falling, in part due to the expiry of a key incentive scheme, the federal Production Tax Credit. And India and China are also phasing out tax incentives for wind power, though support for solar remains strong.
 
Active government support is crucial to scaling up green investment as long as the lack of a strong carbon price and fossil fuel subsidies continue to make green uneconomic for many private investors.
 
The good news is there is growing experience in mobilising private capital through the use of relatively small amounts of public finance. Equity and debt financing by public institutions, especially development banks, has been a crucial catalyst of private investment, as have feed-in tariffs – a guaranteed price for clean energy from small-scale producers – and other means of incentivising renewables investment and pollution clean-up.
 
Growing importance of developing countries in clean-tech
 
Major developing economies are a growing source of finance for green investment, despite, or perhaps because of, the failure to secure an adequate global deal on climate finance. Domestic clean energy financing within non-OECD (developing) countries has exceeded that of OECD (developed) countries each year since 2008, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Total clean-tech investment originating from non-OECD countries for both domestic and international schemes grew from US$4.5 billion in 2004 to US$68 billion in 2011, according to the Climate Policy Initiative.
 
What’s more, judging by recent growth rates, the figure for 2012 may actually exceed the investment originating in developed countries that year.
 
However, that isn’t the end of the story. The Green Investmentreport highlights two further points worthy of attention. First, today`s trade rules and the basis on which international development institutions stump up cash are at best insensitive to, and more often actively block, potential economic development gains from green investment supported by tax dollars. This is a crucial issue for all developing countries, not only major potential exporters such as China, but smaller developing nations in Africa and elsewhere keen to secure economic benefits from their willingness to go green.
 
China`s attempt to gain from public financing of solar-panel manufacturing through lucrative exports, for example, has attracted accusations of unfair subsidies at the World Trade Organization. It’s not just China. South Africa`s attempts to link its willingness to pay more for renewable energy to local manufacturing conditions has met with resistance, often from the very international development banks mandated to support green economic transitions across the developing world.
 
While a free-for-all in subsidising exports clearly has to be avoided, there is now an urgent need to validate and encourage green-growth transitions through international trade rules and available development finance.
 
Second, while it’s reasonable to use public money to incentivise long-term private investors to go green, financial markets need to be more robustly diverted from their endemic short-termism. By not pricing in climate risk, British economist Nicholas Stern points out that investors are in effect betting on, indeed encouraging, an unsustainable increase in global temperatures.
 
Developing countries with maturing capital markets have a chance to leapfrog more advanced competitors by gearing their finance industries for more active investment in tomorrow`s carbon-light economy.
 
This is especially relevant to China, which is at a critical moment in the development of its financial services sector. Recent signals by the China Banking Regulatory Commission, which launched itsGreen Credit Guidelines in 2012 are encouraging. But much more can and needs to be done to shape an appropriate regulatory environment and investment culture that ensures that domestic green investment advances more quickly, and that China becomes a major player in financing green investment internationally.
 
Simon Zadek is currently visiting scholar at Tsinghua School of Economics and Management, and contributed to the preparation of the Green Investment Report. He is also a Senior Fellow of the Global Green Growth Institute and the International Institute for Sustainable Development, and can be reached at simon@zadek.netand followed at www.zadek.net