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{"id":11593,"date":"2017-02-13T22:00:52","date_gmt":"2017-02-13T22:00:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/yali.lab.prod.getusinfo.com\/?p=11593"},"modified":"2017-11-20T16:26:44","modified_gmt":"2017-11-20T16:26:44","slug":"building-social-currency-for-climate-leadership","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/yali.state.gov\/building-social-currency-for-climate-leadership\/","title":{"rendered":"Building social currency for climate leadership"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Max Thabiso Edkins<\/em><\/p>\n

We are living in an exciting time. We know climate change is real; we feel impacts every day. But we also know what we need to do to tackle it. To quote the U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon: \u201cWe are the first generation that can end poverty, the last that can end climate change.\u201d I want to focus on the fact that we can solve climate change.<\/p>\n

Global leaders have spoken up! In the hottest year on record, in 2015, we finally reached global unity with the presentation of the Paris Climate Change Agreement. It was the fastest ratified agreement under the U.N. to date! And this year, after the Agreement entered into force, the urgency for climate action was present at COP22 in Marrakech.<\/p>\n

And even so, we still see global greenhouse gas emissions rising.<\/p>\n

To bend the emissions curve, we need a global movement. We need to trigger the emotions in our global society in support of climate action. We need to make climate change relatable and tangible. And there is no better way of doing that, than by communicating the opportunity in climate change.<\/p>\n

I am optimistic because climate change offers an opportunity for a transition to a low carbon and resilient future. This is the opportunity of our generation to find our purpose and to build the future we want for us and for generations to come.<\/p>\n

In creating climate opportunities it is important to direct these to those most affected. We cannot leave anybody behind because climate change is also a justice issue. Those already having to move homes because of sea-level rise or extreme weather events, or those losing their jobs in the fossil fuel industry, all need to become a part of the solution. Our research at the World Bank shows that an immediate push on climate-smart development can keep more than 100 million people out of poverty.<\/p>\n

I am optimistic because I have a 9-month old son, and when he grows up the world will be a different place. I can see a future where homes and villages in Africa will be powered by solar panels on their roofs, where fossil fuel companies have transitioned to being energy companies with diverse portfolios of renewable energy, where mobility is largely electric, where our consumption patterns are in line with our global carrying capacity, where our forests are preserved and urban spaces are made green, and where there is a price on carbon and the economics favours green growth.<\/p>\n

And we are already building that future. In South Africa we have seen a renewable energy revolution with more than 30 operational projects and with plans of almost 38GW of wind and almost 18GW of solar in the latest Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) for Electricity. And, for me, the headlines coming out of the IRP are that new wind and solar projects produce the cheapest electricity. This is the headline we need to spread! At the Energy21 workshop we heard from South Africa\u2019s Council on Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), that the cost of wind and solar in South Africa are estimated at 4.4 U.S. cents per kilowatt hour, one of the lowest costs around the world.<\/p>\n

Around the world, solar and wind are taking off at exponential scales. All projections of installed capacity made in the early 2000s are being shattered by 14 times for wind and close to 60 times for actual installed solar in 2015. Some see our Climate Action Agenda, to decarbonize our economies, as the biggest new business opportunity in the history of the world. here are the facts:<\/p>\n