21 February 2011
UNEP Releases Green Economy Report
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The UN Enviroment Programme (UNEP) has released its report on the green economy, a key contribution to the UNCSD.

The report outlines 10 sectors where a cumulative investment of US$1.3 trillion per year would allow a green economy to grow at a higher rate than the current economic model (the "brown economy").

21 February 2011: The UN Enviroment Programme (UNEP) has released a report on the green economy, titled “Towards a Green Economy: Pathways to Sustainable Development and Poverty Eradication,” as a key contribution of UNEP to the UN Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD, or Rio 2012).

The report asserts that an investment of 2% of global gross domestic product (GDP), or US$1.3 trillion per year, into 10 key sectors could trigger “greener, smarter growth” while fighting poverty, through a transition to a low-carbon, resource-efficient economy. An investment of that amount “would grow the global economy at around the same rate” as under current economic models, or higher. The new, green model would also remove the inherent risks, shocks, scarcities, and crises of the current model (the “brown economy”). The 10 sectors, where UNEP says investment would be key to building a green economy are: agriculture, buildings, energy supply, fisheries, forestry, industry including energy efficiency, tourism, transport, waste management and water.

The website for the report includes: a synthesis of the report for policy-makers, a summary of the report’s conclusions, information on the activities of the Green Economy Initiative, and success stories. [Publication: Towards a Green Economy: Pathways to Sustainable Development and Poverty Eradication] [Chapter on Enabling Conditions Supporting the Transition to a Global Green Economy]

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