Another source of confusion is the scale of sustainability investments. The reality is that investments in sustainability will never represent more than a minority share of the total level of financing in our economies. The EU taxonomy provides a good example. According to first estimates, the taxonomy covers about 5% of the financing currently provided by European financial institutions. This figure must be adjusted to reflect the climate transition’s investment needs, which are higher - around 10% of total investment. While these investments must clearly grow, they will not overshadow other essential financing. The goal should not be to funnel all investments into one green sector, as this would run the risk of greenwashing, and creating a gigantic speculative bubble. On the contrary, the priority should be to decarbonize the entire economy, including the sectors that have to implement the most changes.
The defense industry should be part of the crucial evolution of standards related to governance, the fight against corruption, equality and climate change. It cannot be excluded from these mechanisms based on ideological rather than economic and legal reasons. Legislators, regulatory authorities and the financial governance bodies - investors, investment funds, banks and insurance companies - need to defend themselves from militant pressure regarding the shape and application of these necessary changes. They need to ensure that a coherent strategy prevails, in order for a new economic model to emerge - one that reconciles sustainability, competitiveness and security.
Copyright: Eliot BLONDET / POOL / AFP
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