Foto: Stefano Boeri Architett |
But
achieving those goals, and the attendant growth, would be dependent on
governments and businesses investing in sustainable cities, and targeting green
growth above high-carbon infrastructure.
The report,
from the non-profit Business and Sustainable Development Commission (BDSC),
found that Asian cities would be among the biggest beneficiaries of the move to
achieve the global sustainable development goals. It points to improved air and
water, better-designed buildings and public spaces, investment in low-carbon
transport, and better use of physical resources, with less waste.
Mark
Malloch-Brown, former UN deputy secretary-general and chairman of the BSDC,
predicted that businesses would continue to invest in low-carbon growth and not
take fright at the withdrawal of the US,
the world’s second biggest carbon emitter, from the Paris agreement on climate change.
“I suspect
[President Trump] will be surprised how unpopular this decision will be with
business,” Malloch-Brown said. “This tilts things back in a way that is not
just disruptive for business, but potentially highly dangerous for all of us as
citizens. Therefore he may be even more surprised to find how few take the
chance to march backwards with him.”
The report
found that affordable housing in China, closely followed by other
developing countries, was the biggest single economic opportunity. Across the
Asia-Pacific region the construction of affordable housing was expected to be
worth $505bn by 2030. This would have huge knock-on benefits in reducing consumption,
better health, cutting greenhouse gases and staving off dangerous climate
change.
“Improving
the design and construction of houses will reduce household operating costs and
reshape the world’s energy consumption patterns and environmental conditions
for years to come,” the report’s authors noted.
Electric
vehicles, meanwhile, are projected to make up at least 35% of all car sales in Asia by 2040, transforming cities and reducing air
pollution. Shared transport business models, such as carpooling, are also
forecast for strong growth.
Ho Ching,
chief executive of Temasek Holdings in Singapore and one of the commissioners
of the report, said cities should aspire to an “ABC world”: the “active” traits
of a robust economy and good life opportunities for citizens; a “beautiful”
environment with cohesive and inclusive communities; and “clean” surroundings,
characterised by fresh and unpolluted air, clear waters, and measures to combat
climate change.
The BSDC
forecast that 230m new jobs would be created in cities and across the economies
of Asia by 2030 in sustainable goods
and services, with benefits from improved agricultural methods to renewable
energy and better access to healthcare. By 2030, this would represent an
economic boost of $5tn a year, the study found.
Monday’s
report is one of a series of projections that have been appearing since
January, examining the prospects for sustainable development around the globe.
For the growth to be realised, governments and businesses across the region
would need to cooperate in stepping up efforts to make their activities more
environmentally sound: reducing pollution and greenhouse gas emissions,
investing in cleaner fuels and using resources more efficiently.
Although
the potential prize may be large, the report also found that governments,
businesses and others would need to invest $1.7tn a year in order to reap the
greatest potential benefits.
The BSDC’s
commissioners are made up of business, organised labour and civic society
leaders, with a remit to examine the potential economic and social effects of
achieving the international sustainable development goals.
Paul
Polman, chief executive of Unilever and one of the commissioners, said of the
latest report: “the opportunities for businesses serving consumers in Asia are
obvious: strategies that sustainably meet the demands of the growing
middle-class, while tackling urgent environmental and social challenges, will
be successful in unlocking market value. Aligning these strategies with the
global goals is not just good for society and the environment, but makes
strategic business sense.”
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