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A Green Recovery Won't Happen By Accident

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Patrick Schröder, Senior Research Fellow - Energy, Environment & Resources Program, Chatham House. In a world where governments, the public, and the media remain focused on a single issue, discussions of a green recovery following the COVID-19 outbreak continue to gain traction. The political framing of major public investments is shifting, with support from electorates for a more environmentally friendly approach. Although we’ll have to wait to see if the policies deliver in reality, it is encouraging that some long-overdue initiatives are being accelerated. In low- and middle-income countries, a green recovery is a tantalizing prospect. Many are at a point where their future economic development, industrialization, and urbanization could be steered from “grey to green,” as United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres suggested near the beginning of the pandemic. But we must be wary of assuming that the coronavirus will automatically bring us to our senses, providing a course correction toward greener and more just economies. Former U.N. Special Rapporteur Philip Alston’s recent warning about the misplaced optimism surrounding the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is a reminder that progress doesn’t happen by accident. The post-coronavirus recovery will only be green and equitable if we can build international consensus and coordination. “Green recovery” must be more than a glib phrase. One concept that has been gaining traction for a number of years is the circular economy. This approach, in which resources are kept in use for as long as possible and waste products are reused, could help steer a green recovery. It means reinventing linear global supply chains, which are based on extraction, consumption, and disposal and whose weaknesses have been exposed by the pandemic. Circular economy practices can yield bigger gains. By reducing waste and pollution, a circular approach could drive progress toward a number of the Sustainable Development Goals, including health and well-being, water and sanitation, green industrial development, inclusive and safe urbanization, and sustainable consumption and production. However, it is important that as these opportunities gain new attention — and funding — concepts such as circularity are clearly defined and potential impacts are assessed and measured. If not, the rush for countries, companies, and even NGOs to burnish their green credentials risks misguided investments and, worse yet, “green washing.” Much like dealing with the pandemic itself, the economic recovery must be a global project. Second, these investments must be guided by stronger, internationally agreed standards on how money is used and how projects are assessed. Green development concepts need to be more than just a loosely defined badge. Finally, we need to work out how to bridge the gap between good practice on the ground and investments made by multilateral or international actors. In my research, I have seen many examples of small and medium-sized enterprises and small entrepreneurs using circular practices, such as closed-loop technologies in India’s metal-finishing industries or turning plastic waste into paving tiles in Gambia. We need to make sure the financial and technical backing is available to scale up these sorts of initiatives. There is a clear opportunity ahead of us, but a green recovery won’t happen by accident. We need to get our investments and processes right now to seize the moment that’s coming.

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