With reference to the above article, the short article below explains the scenario in the Asian Climate Change context.
“Green Energy : A Paradigm Shift in Sustainability”
Green energy is not something new since the discovery of the depletion of the ozone layer and global climate change as a direct impact of green house effect on a worldwide scale.
Various international conventions/agreements on the reduction of green house effect will remain forever on glossy papers if countries around the world are not serious in committing themselves towards real implementation within national boundary.
Political will power, or even real politics for that matter alone, is insufficient in promoting green energy as attested by the economics of reality in both developed and developing countries.
A paradigm shift is needed in forging a new instrument of international co-operation within the wider framework of Free Trade Agreements and joint conviction shared by stakeholders such as the OECD, major banking bodies(i.e. IMF, World bank, ADB) and leading industrial/corporate entities.
…………………………......
Jeong Chun-phuoc
lecturer-in-law
[an an advocate of Competitive & Strategic Environmenting] .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
COMMENTS
BY JEONG CHUN PHUOC
ON November 10, 2009 12:18 PM
With reference to the above article, the short article below explains the scenario in the Asian Climate Change context.
“Green Energy : A Paradigm Shift in Sustainability”
Green energy is not something new since the discovery of the depletion of the ozone layer and global climate change as a direct impact of green house effect on a worldwide scale.
Various international conventions/agreements on the reduction of green house effect will remain forever on glossy papers if countries around the world are not serious in committing themselves towards real implementation within national boundary.
Political will power, or even real politics for that matter alone, is insufficient in promoting green energy as attested by the economics of reality in both developed and developing countries.
A paradigm shift is needed in forging a new instrument of international co-operation within the wider framework of Free Trade Agreements and joint conviction shared by stakeholders such as the OECD, major banking bodies(i.e. IMF, World bank, ADB) and leading industrial/corporate entities.
…………………………......
Jeong Chun-phuoc
lecturer-in-law
[an an advocate of Competitive & Strategic Environmenting]
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)