Jump to content

S.E Asia could lose $28 trillion if it fails to act fast on climate change


Recommended Posts

Posted

Southeast Asia’s economy could lose trillions of dollars over the next 50 years, if the region does not act soon to reduce carbon emissions significantly, a Deloitte report found.

 

depositphotos_29176205-stock-photo-offshore-wind-farm.jpg.6936d5019e83c8271e111099708bc19f.jpg

 

In fact, the region is at a major turning point, and can turn the cost into an great opportunity, the report said.

 

Accord to CNBC, if Southeast Asia steps up efforts on climate change and rapidly reduces emissions, it could achieve economic gains of $12.5 trillion in present value terms — with an average GDP growth of 3.5% each year for the next 50 years, according to the consulting firm.

 

“This potential future not only avoids the worst impacts of climate change, it also creates prosperous long-term economic growth for Southeast Asia and the world,” said Deloitte.

 

Unmitigated climate change threatens to wipe out decades of hard-won economic growth in Southeast Asia.

The Deloitte Report said that failing to do so, however, could lead to global warming of more than 3°C by 2070, according to Deloitte’s model.

 

This could cost the region economic losses worth about $28 trillion in present value terms in the next 50 years, and reduce GDP growth by an average of 7.5% each year in the same period, according to Deloitte’s forecast.

 

Southeast Asia is home to half a billion people and has a gross domestic product of $3 trillion, according to Deloitte.

 

Vietnam-maximising-the-wind-revolution-in-energy-sector.jpg.3ead7753ac98347f251611af1361745e.jpg

Vietnam wind farm (File photo)

 

The region — defined in the report as Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, The Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, Timor-Leste and Thailand – has seen a 5% to 12% average annual per capita GDP growth since the 21st century.

 

Climate change threatens regions economy

 

“Unmitigated climate change threatens to wipe out decades of hard-won economic growth in Southeast Asia,” Deloitte said.

 

“The foundations of the region’s prosperity — it’s natural and human capital — are at risk, and along with them each nation’s standard of living, its prospects for future growth, its place on the global stage and the wellbeing of its people.”

 

From agriculture to tourism, climate inaction will cause major disruptions as livelihoods are lost due to rising sea levels and natural disasters.

 

Who could lose out?

 

 

Here are the industries set to lose trillions by 2070:

Services industry could lose $9 trillion;

Manufacturing sector faces $7 trillion of losses;

Retail and tourism could collectively lose $5 trillion.

 

Together with construction, mining and gas, these sectors account for 83% of the region’s economic output, Deloitte said.

 

“The impacts of a changing climate would be felt across Southeast Asian nations and industries, with some bearing the economic burden more than others,” the report said.

 

Time is running out

 

The United Nations has warned that keeping global warming close to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels “will be beyond reach” in the next two decades unless immediate action is taken to reduce carbon emissions.

 

“There is an urgency for countries and governments to act quickly — within the next 10 years — to circumvent irreversible damage from climate change,” said Philip Yuen, Chief Executive Officer of Deloitte Southeast Asia.

 

Southeast Asia needs to pivot from seeing global warming efforts as an optional cost, to seeing it as “an investment in a climate-driven transformation to a better future,” said Deloitte.

 

The amount countries spend on decarbonization would be “almost immediately offset by positive returns in the capital and technology,” the report said.

 

“We have the opportunity to create a new engine for sustainable economic prosperity while at the same time preventing the worse consequences of a warming world.”

 

 

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...