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Meltdowns compared: Financial vs Climate Crises - Duncan Green
11 Nov 2008 06:00:58 GMT
Source: Oxfam GB - UK
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Some highlights from a thought-provoking exchange with my colleague Sarah Best, who works on private sector and climate change issues.

Similar causes

The roots of the financial crisis lie in a failure to properly assess risk (e.g. of sub-prime loans), an absence of proper oversight and regulation (e.g. of complex financial instruments) and consumption beyond our needs (e.g. credit, mortgages).  The causes of the climate crisis are similar: decision-makers still do not properly understand the climate risks and what it means for people and planet. Rules for capping emissions and incentivising greener technology are absent or weak. We have been using up carbon reserves at an unsustainable rate - getting deeper and deeper into nature’s debt.

Common cures: green economy offers a way out of climate crisis

Adaptation financing - a modest insurance premium for long-term security
· The £31bn ($50bn) Oxfam estimates will be needed in annual adaptation financing to support millions of poor people affected to climate change looks modest compared to what taxpayers are being asked to stump up in the bail-out, or what financiers reward themselves for underperformance.

Taken from Duncan’s From Poverty To Power blog.


More from the Oxfam Press Office at http://www.oxfam.org.uk/news


[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]


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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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China's Premier Wen Jiabao delivers a speech during the opening ceremony of Beijing high-level conference on climate change at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing November 7, 2008. REUTERS/Jason ...



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Last updated:Tue Nov 11 06:46:02 2008