Wednesday, September 16, 2009

[EQ] World Development Report 2010: Development and Climate Change

World Development Report 2010: Development and Climate Change

Published September 15, 2010

Website: http://go.worldbank.org/FTD88BBDV0

            Press release: http://go.worldbank.org/CEYPULJJ00

 

"……Poverty reduction and sustainable development remain core global priorities. A quarter of the population of developing countries still lives on less than $1.25 a day. One billion people lack clean drinking water; 1.6 billion, electricity; and 3 billion, adequate sanitation. A quarter of all developing country children are malnourished. Addressing these needs must remain the priorities both of developing countries and of development aid—recog­nizing that development will get harder, not easier, with climate change.

Yet climate change must urgently be addressed. Climate change threatens all countries, with developing countries the most vulnerable. Estimates are that they would bear some 75 to 80 percent of the costs of damages caused by the changing climate. Even 2°C warming above preindustrial temperatures—the minimum the world is likely to experience—could result in permanent reductions in GDP of 4 to 5 percent for Africa and South Asia. Most developing countries lack sufficient financial and technical capacities to manage increas­ing climate risk. They also depend more directly on climate-sensitive natural resources for income and well-being. And most are in tropical and subtropical regions already subject to highly variable climate.

Economic growth alone is unlikely to be fast or equitable enough to counter threats from climate change, particularly if it remains carbon intensive and accelerates global warming. So climate policy cannot be framed as a choice between growth and climate change. In fact, climate-smart policies are those that enhance development, reduce vulnerability, and finance the transition to low-carbon growth paths.

A climate-smart world is within our reach if we act now, act together, and act differently than we have in the past:

- Acting now is essential or else options disappear and costs increase as the world com­mits itself to high-carbon pathways and largely irreversible warming trajectories.
- Acting together is key to keeping the costs down and effectively tackling both adaptaption and mitigation.
- Acting differently is required to enable a sustainable future in a changing world. In the next few decades, the world's energy systems must be transformed so that global emissions drop 50 to 80 percent…."

 

 

 

 

Advance Press Edition, still subject to final changes
(final Report due out in late October)

Download options for the World Development Report 2010.

(To read these PDF files, you need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader).

Overviews (multilingual)
English, Arabic, Chinese, French, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish

Table of Contents & front matter

Complete report | Part One | Part Two 

Overview

1. Understanding the links between climate change and development

Focus A: the science of climate change

Part I

2. Reducing human vulnerability: helping people help themselves

Focus B: Biodiversity and ecosystem services in a changing climate

3. Managing land and water to feed nine billion people and protect natural systems

4. Energizing development without compromising the climate

Part II

5. Integrating development into a global climate regime

Focus C: Trade and climate change

6. Generating the funding needed for mitigation and adaptation

7. Accelerating innovation and technology diffusion

8. Overcoming behavioral and institutional inertia

Glossary

 

 

 

 



 

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