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Yellen says green private investment critical to fight climate change
by AFP Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 21, 2021

The cost of dealing with climate change is "enormous" and private investors will have to step up to finance renewable energy and other innovations for the US economy, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday.

A day before President Joe Biden hosts a virtual climate summit with 40 world leaders on Earth Day, Yellen spoke to an international banking group to outline the administration's approach to the "existential risk."

"After sitting on the sidelines for four years, the US government is fully committed to rejoin the fight against climate change," she said in a speech to the Institute for International Finance.

Delivering on the Paris climate accord goals "will require bold and urgent action -- nothing less than transforming important sectors of the global economy, especially when it comes to how we generate power and move people and goods."

She cited one estimate saying the price tag for making the US economy carbon neutral is $2.5 trillion, and while Biden's proposed $2 trillion jobs and infrastructure plan provides critical investments, "meeting the total cost over the next 10 years will require substantially more."

"Private capital will need to fill most of that gap," she said.

US climate envoy John Kerry said earlier Wednesday that private funding is the "only place" to find the resources and technology necessary to reduce emissions.

Administration officials said Biden on Thursday would announce an ambitious new US target for slashing emissions that cause climate change over the next decade, and rally world leaders to do likewise.


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ENERGY NEWS
Global trade rules can help fight climate change: US trade chief
Washington (AFP) April 15, 2021
International commerce creates incentives for countries to erode environmental protections to attract investment, and global trade rules are needed to counter that "race to the bottom," US Trade Representative Katherine Tai said on Thursday. "The view that environmental issues are not an inherent part of trade ignores the reality that the existing rules of globalization incentivize downward pressure on environmental protection," Tai said in her first public speech. "This puts countries with hig ... read more

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