UN calls for poor countries
To eliminate the red tape to attract clean energy investments
Clean Energy

Reuters
He said a manual for a United Nations funding yesterday that many developing countries bear a strong trend for investment in clean energy and the need to eliminate red tape and approve new rules to attract funding to help in the fight against climate change.
Investments grew in the clean energy sector globally by 30 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, reaching a record amount of $ 243 billion, but 90 percent of this amount went to members of the Group of Twenty, which includes the advanced industrial countries and rising economic powers led by China and India.
Said Yannick Jlemarik, director of environmental financing in the United Nations Programme for Development of the handbook that came in the 160-page title (to stimulate the financing of climate), "We are deeply concerned about the uneven distribution of investments."
Able and poor countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia to take simple steps to avoid staying on the sidelines. And showed appreciation for the United Nations to private sector investment in clean energy technology could rise to $ 450 billion by 2012 and to 600 billion by 2020. The handbook tips such as the definition of emissions reduction technology and the reform of the bureaucracy and the design of incentives such as preferential tariffs for renewable energy in order to ensure the stability of electricity prices for renewable energy sources such as wind and solar energy.
The report said that the broad participation of all countries is the key in helping to reach the goal, put the environment at a conference organized by the United Nations last year in Mexico, is to reduce the temperature rise of less than two degrees Celsius compared with the time before the Industrial Revolution.

To eliminate the red tape to attract clean energy investments
Clean Energy
Reuters
He said a manual for a United Nations funding yesterday that many developing countries bear a strong trend for investment in clean energy and the need to eliminate red tape and approve new rules to attract funding to help in the fight against climate change.
Investments grew in the clean energy sector globally by 30 percent in 2010 compared with 2009, reaching a record amount of $ 243 billion, but 90 percent of this amount went to members of the Group of Twenty, which includes the advanced industrial countries and rising economic powers led by China and India.
Said Yannick Jlemarik, director of environmental financing in the United Nations Programme for Development of the handbook that came in the 160-page title (to stimulate the financing of climate), "We are deeply concerned about the uneven distribution of investments."
Able and poor countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia to take simple steps to avoid staying on the sidelines. And showed appreciation for the United Nations to private sector investment in clean energy technology could rise to $ 450 billion by 2012 and to 600 billion by 2020. The handbook tips such as the definition of emissions reduction technology and the reform of the bureaucracy and the design of incentives such as preferential tariffs for renewable energy in order to ensure the stability of electricity prices for renewable energy sources such as wind and solar energy.
The report said that the broad participation of all countries is the key in helping to reach the goal, put the environment at a conference organized by the United Nations last year in Mexico, is to reduce the temperature rise of less than two degrees Celsius compared with the time before the Industrial Revolution.
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