ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Climate Change Senator Sherry
Rehman on Wednesday said the business across the country needed to build green technology
and green goals to ensure Eco-friendly and sustainable growth.
The Minister during her keynote speech at the “Leaders in Islamabad Business Summit 2022”
on the topic ‘Climate Change and Way Forward for Pakistan,’ highlighted, “Climate change is a
cross-cutting national issue that needs immediate action. We need to work towards building
green technology and green goals for a thriving business landscape in Pakistan.”
Taking the floor at the Summit, the minister stressed, “Seeing the country ravaged with
climate catastrophes in the form of long, disastrous monsoon spells, unbearable heat waves,
and apocalyptic flash floods, etc. make it all the more relevant for us to talk about how climate
change and its environmental impact will directly affect businesses, society, and ecosystems.
Balochistan alone faced 605% of rain this year on a 30-year average, leading to damages to life
and property.
All these changes have made Pakistan the ground zero of climate catastrophe. Damage to
agricultural productivity, livelihoods, human health, and economic stability has led to
irreversible impacts, including GDP losses of 9.1% (UNESCAP). Until recently, a large number
of companies, unfortunately, have freely emitted carbon, dumped effluent in our water bodies,
and increased single-use plastic production. We will face disastrous consequences if we keep up
with these practices.”
Highlighting the lack of global climate action, Sherry also added, “Pakistan will now have to
look at its own climate solutions since the Global leadership is well behind the curve on climate
targets.
The North has gotten rich from exploiting natural resources, which is why the GHGs have
gone through the roof. The pledges are not matched by processes, and the ambitions are not
matched by actions. The pace of climate change and its impacts are far more accelerated than
the benchmark of 2050 set by world leaders at COPs.
Notwithstanding mitigation, which is not a goal to be lost sight of, we are shifting our focus to
building a National Adaptation Plan to face climate disasters and create resilience.”
Addressing the business community, the minister said, “Countries are enhancing their climate
literacy and seeking to ‘decarbonize’ their production cycle. Everybody is looking at the nature
to go back to default, which is not happening, it will not, not on its own. We have to reset
priorities to level up our resources and face climate disasters head-on. The provinces, too, will
need to scale up. Our ambit is to provide them with policy guidelines. We need to build green
technology and goals, and we would appreciate initiatives from the Tech companies. Many
companies are merely greenwashing their pollution by funding projects to merely tick boxes
with a dash of CSR. This needs to stop. Companies with innovations and technology to help
deal with this climate crisis are welcomed and should come forward. A company’s climate plan
should not stop at decarbonization; rather, it should start there. Transparent & ethical
sourcing of materials, environmentally conscious manufacturing practices, waste-conscious
packaging, shipping choices negating carbon footprint are just a few ideas of sustainable
practices.”