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Friday, April 19, 2024

PH wants more ‘action’ on climate commitments

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The government urged Western economies largely responsible for the most greenhouse gas emissions to act now in significantly reducing their carbon footprints and to make good on their commitments to extend the financing needed by climate-vulnerable countries to transition to a clean energy future.

Speaking on behalf of the Philippines, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said at the opening of the virtual 2021 Annual Meeting of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) that he wanted to see the decades-old discussions on how to fight climate change translated into concrete actions now.

“Clearly, the Philippines is moving with urgency. But we have seen very little funding and actions promised by Western countries materialize. All that has been done is talk without concrete action,” Dominguez said at the AIIB Flagship Seminar on the Paris Agreement held virtually Wednesday night (Manila time).

“We need the Western countries to take responsibility for having contributed and continue to contribute the most to greenhouse gas emissions. They must be given the greater burden of paying for the grants, investments, and subsidies needed for the most climate-vulnerable countries to mitigate the effects of global warming,” he said.

Dominguez said these countries have “avoided the pain by buying their way out of their global obligations,” which include offering developing nations money that are insufficient to make the carbon reductions that they themselves are unwilling to make in their own economies.

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“Because of this, very little has been achieved in mitigating climate change,” he said.

He said to demonstrate how developing countries can mainstream climate change in the financial sector, the Philippines will showcase its Sustainable Finance Roadmap at the 26th United Nations (UN) Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) to be held in Glasgow, Scotland next week.

Dominguez said this masterplan also shows that the Philippines intends to be at the forefront of the global fight against climate change, and remains true to its bold and ambitious commitment to the Paris Agreement to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 75 percent over the next decade even though it contributes only 0.3 percent to the planet’s total emissions.

“We are hitting the ground running with simultaneous initiatives to demonstrate that much can be done by clear and coherent fina cial pol cies that give primacy to the environment. We hope our Sustainable Finance Roadmap will inspire other developing countries towards adopting the  appropriate finance policies that will help reduce carbon emissions,” Dominguez said.

This Sustainable Finance Roadmap, developed by the Philippines’ “Green Force” of agencies led by the Department of Finance and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, synergizes public and private investments in green projects and sets the guiding principles that will create the environment for greener policies.

“Financial policies incentivizing green and renewable investments, supported by a complete policy framework guiding government action, eventually affect the bottom line of private businesses. These financial policies can be powerful instruments to encourage enterprises to be more conscious of their effects on the climate,” Dominguez said.

The Philippine government is also pushing the congressional passage of a law banning single-use plastics to urge Filipinos to do their part daily in saving the world’s environment.

It will likewise launch soon a landmark project that will accelerate the country’s transition from coal to clean energy, he said.

When asked during the AIIB forum what would be the biggest success that he wants to see from the COP26, Dominguez reiterated his call for the signatories to stop talking and start acting now.

“We want to see from the COP26 meeting a clear transition of the Paris Agreement from being a platform for discussion to a springboard for concrete action,” he said.

“This is the 26th time that the COP will be meeting. Yet, little action has been taken. Nothing would please us more than seeing the countries that emitted and continue to emit the most greenhouse gasses to accept the responsibility of financing the transition to carbon neutrality,” he said.

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