Description :
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Green growth, the promotion of energy efficiency and clean energy technologies and
sustainable development are frequently viewed as complementary goals by international
policymakers. This paper argues that green growth will not ensure sustainable economic
development as long as global ecosystem degradation and loss means that the world
continues to face worsening problems of ecological scarcity — the loss of myriad
benefits, or “services”, as these systems are exploited for human use and activity.
Overcoming this problem requires addressing further sustainability and funding challenges.
The sustainability challenge is to overcome a vast array of market, policy and institutional
failures that prevents recognition of the economic significance of this scarcity.
The funding challenge is to bridge the shortfall between the global benefits that
humankind receives from ecosystems and what we are willing to pay to maintain and
conserve them. Improving economic and scientific analysis of ecological scarcity,
valuing the loss in benefits, and translating the implications into policy are the
key steps for addressing the sustainability challenge. Exploring and implementing
a range of innovative financing mechanisms, from international payments for ecosystem
services to financial and currency transactions taxes to international financing
facilities are possibilities for alleviating the funding challenge.
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