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OECD report: Ambitious climate actions could boost global GDP by 0.2% in 2040

OECD report: Ambitious climate actions could boost global GDP by 0.2% in 2040

A study released on Tuesday showed that accelerated climate action could boost the global GDP by 0.2% in 2040 compared to current policies. This is as delegates from over 40 countries gather in Berlin for the COP30 Summit in Brazil.

According to an analysis by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and United Nations Development Programme, well-designed climate policy not only reduces emissions but can also increase efficiency, productivity and innovations - potentially increasing output by a sum equivalent to the size Sweden's economic system.

The study concluded that investing in clean energy, efficiency, and innovation can boost productivity and innovation and offset the economic impact caused by policy-driven changes to prices and consumption. The study said that reinvesting carbon revenue could boost GDP further and increase public support for climate action.

The study found that NDCs, which are the plans countries make to achieve global climate goals and will be updated by September, provide policy certainty to markets so they can mobilise resources for sustainable growth.

The study warns that unclear climate policies can delay private investments and reduce GDP by 0.75 percent as early as 2030.

This study is being released as Ministers from 40 countries meet in Berlin to discuss the preparations for the UN Climate Conference in Belem in Brazil, in November.

The Petersberg Conference will be the first major ministerial meeting on climate since the Trump Administration withdrew from the Paris Agreement.

In a recent statement, German Foreign Minister Annalena Bärbock stated that anyone who dismissed climate action as expensive, burdensome or superfluous in these turbulent times cannot be counted.

Baerbock stated that the Petersberg climate conference will focus on the implementation of global goals set by the Dubai climate summit in 2023, including an agreement at the summit to transition away fossil fuels and to triple the global renewable energy capability by 2030. (Reporting and editing by Alex Richardson; Riham Alkousaa)

(source: Reuters)