Opinion: A green recovery action plan for the World Bank

Women water mukau saplings in Kenya. Photo by: Flore de Preneuf / World Bank / CC BY-NC-ND

In this era of multiple crises, it’s important to consider the question: What solutions work for all of them?

The crises we’re talking about are racial injustice, the coronavirus pandemic, and climate change. They seem disparate, but there is a connection: All three hit people of color and poor and marginalized groups the hardest.

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Climate, in particular, is most often discussed among governments and groups in the global north. Yet the grim reality is that it is impacting poor rural and coastal communities, from Mozambique to the Maldives to Mexico. Racial and social justice compel us to act on climate even as we address police brutality and access to health care.

To address all three issues, it is clear that business as usual is no longer an option. Governments and multilateral organizations that are serious about ending poverty and improving governance while caring for the health of people and planet must think outside the box to identify a new set of approaches and partners to shape a more resilient future. Climate justice requires systemic change.

Adopting these measures would help protect and amplify the bank’s impact and effectiveness, to the benefit of those who stand to lose the most.

According to the United Nations Development Programme, 75 countries — which represent 37% of global greenhouse gas emissions — are leading the way in their enhancement of national climate plans by curbing emissions, by including measures to make societies more resilient to climate change, or by doing both. But more countries, particularly those with carbon-intensive economies, need to emphatically embrace green recovery plans so that the billions spent in response to COVID-19 move us closer to — not further away from — our critical climate and sustainable development goals.

This is where the World Bank comes in. With a mandate to address climate change and its impacts on the poorest and most vulnerable, the bank is well positioned to steer the governments it works with down a greener, more just and resilient pathway. The bank has already proposed a sustainability checklist to assess COVID-19 recovery projects.

That’s a great start, but there is a lot more the bank can do to address the coronavirus and climate catastrophes at the same time. Here are the top five:

Sustaining and accelerating climate action amid a pandemic is no easy task for the World Bank or anyone else. However, adopting these measures would help protect and amplify the bank’s impact and effectiveness, to the benefit of those who stand to lose the most.