By Bisola Adeyemo
Climate activists at the ongoing COP26 conference on Wednesday opposed governments and big investors decision of “greenwashing” as fresh plans in curbing global warming.
The governments and big investors announced on Wednesday that trillions of dollars will be poured into curbing global warming, reflecting the financial world’s growing embrace of efforts to fight climate change as both a business necessity and opportunity.
But the disagreement between social justice activists and the world leaders led to protest while the activists demanded scrutiny of investors’ motives, warning that the same financial institutions which profited from funding fossil fuel firms were now being presented as green champions.
According to the climate activists, there should be is a growing agreement that the private sector must be involved if truly the world is ready to avoid catastrophic global warming, Africanews reports.
Speaking at the U.N. climate summit in the Scottish city of Glasgow, Britain’s Treasury chief Rishi Sunak said that while countries such as the U.K. are stumping up more cash to fund the shift to low carbon economies around the world, “public investment alone isn’t enough.”
He praised a pledge Wednesday by a group of over 450 major financial institutions to align their investments with the 2015 Paris climate accord which calls for reducing carbon dioxide emissions and other efforts to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels.
“This is a historic wall of capital for the net-zero transition around the world,” Sunak said at the conference known as COP26.
The Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero launched this year by former Bank of England chief Mark Carney promised to follow scientific guidelines for cutting carbon emissions to “net zero” by 2050.
Experts say fossil fuel use has to drop drastically over the coming decade to cap warming at 1.5C, meaning investors would likely have to dramatically cut back money going to oil, gas and coal producers.
Some of the poorer countries, lamented that Britain and other wealthy nations have failed to meet a previous commitment to provide $100 billion a year to finance climate-related projects in the developing world by 2020. The target is now expected to be met in 2023.