The world's poorest and most vulnerable countries are doing their bit to promote the expansion of renewable energy. The least we can do in the developed world is to ensure the money in our bank account helps rather than hinders their efforts, writes JOE WARE
… 2050. These nations may be small in terms of GDP when compared to the wealthy countries of … These nations may be small in terms of GDP when compared to the wealthy countries of …
For the second year running CO2 emissions flatlined even as the global economy was growing at around 3%, writes Alex Kirby. But sharply rising temperatures show the need for further massive renewable energy deployment to actually bring emissions down.
… to the International Monetary Fund, global GDP grew by 3.4% in 2014 and 3.1% in 2015. …
Renewable energy could supply Russia and Central Asian countries with 100% of their electricity needs by 2030, writes Paul Brown - and cut costs significantly compared to nuclear power and CO2-abated fossil fuels.
… of the world's biggest emitters per unit of GDP, but has adopted a national plan to go for …
Under my leadership Britain will act to protect the future of our planet, with social justice at the heart of our environment policies, writes Jeremy Corbyn. Meeting our Paris climate targets will be the starting point for a green industrial revolution that will deliver clean, affordable energy to all, create millions of new jobs, and establish the export industries of the future.
… by government. It will increase the country's GDP by £13.9 billion a year by 2030. Further, …