Gold Standard: You’ve been to 24 COP summits. What is unique about the current time? What do you hope to see from this COP?
Yvo de Boer: Let me begin with the positive part of the answer to this question. This CoP really represents a unique opportunity to show progress on three fronts, two of them related.
Now the less positive part of the answer:
So this is actually not the best time to look for additional financial resources, at a time when we need them most. At least for now.
Gold Standard: We know that trillions must be mobilized to achieve the SDGs, but that achieving them represents trillions of dollars in market opportunity for business. What would be your request to the private sector to mitigate the climate emergency and accelerate progress in sustainable development in t time scales required?
Yvo de Boer: The private sector made important commitments at the CoP in Glasgow. So I expect the private sector to meet those commitments. Second there needs to be a stronger recognition on the part of the private sector that this is actually a collective responsibility. To quote an old friend: “business cannot succeed in a society that fails”. By implication this means that business has a responsibility to ensure societies succeed. Third it is important that business engagement is sincere and devoid of greenwashing. This is especially true where carbon markets are concerned.
Gold Standard: You’ve chaired the Board of Gold Standard for 4 years now and have seen the organisation move from working primarily in carbon markets to having ambitions to drive a new scale of sustainable finance. How do you believe Gold Standard can contribute to helping governments, companies and investors maximise their impact to climate security and sustainable development?
Yvo de Boer:The sad truth is that we live in a world where, at the end of the day, the only capital we really value is cash. As a result we often squander natural capital, social capital, intellectual capital and other capitals as though they were worthless. This while we know full well that they are not. We are allowing ourselves to take a mortgage on them. The challenge the Gold Standard Foundation needs to address is how we can express value more broadly, to ensure multiple capitals are respected. This means working with financial institutions to ask the right questions, respect the right values and invest in the right projects. It means working with corporates to express the broad value they create in ways that are relevant to their investor, customers and regulators. It means working with policy makers to put in place the regulatory environment that encourages the positives and discourages the negatives. The Gold Standard Foundation is a small organisation, and my ask is huge. So if you are tiny, and the task is monumental, find friends and be sure your initiatives are focussed on where you can have most impact.
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