COP30 Warning: Global South Risks Being Left Behind in Green Economy

New research from the Centre for Science and Environment warns that developing nations risk being excluded from the benefits of the green economy. The study reveals how countries supplying critical resources like cocoa and minerals capture very little of the final value. It highlights that clean technology manufacturing remains concentrated in developed nations while the Global South faces dual challenges of decarbonization and industrialization. The report calls for fundamental changes to global trade rules to ensure economic resilience alongside climate action.

Key Points: COP30 Report Warns Developing Nations Green Economy Exclusion

  • Developing nations supply 50% global cocoa but capture only 6% value from chocolate products
  • Global South holds most critical minerals but faces price volatility and geopolitical risks
  • Clean tech manufacturing concentrated in China, EU and US with developing regions under 5%
  • CSE calls for resetting global trade rules to enable local value addition and jobs
4 min read

COP30: Developing nations at risk of being left behind in green economy race, says research

CSE research reveals developing countries face exclusion from green economy benefits despite supplying critical resources, calling for fair trade rules and economic resilience.

"The future green economy must not mirror the inequalities of the old one - Sunita Narain, CSE Director General"

New Delhi, Nov 11

Will developing countries be left behind in the race towards a new, green economy? This is an emerging threat, says a set of new discussion papers by New Delhi-based think tank Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) at a time when the UN's 30th Conference of Parties (COP) has kicked off in Belem in Brazil amid a turbulent geopolitical landscape in which climate ambition is struggling to stay afloat.

'Towards a new green world', as the CSE paper series is called, was released on the eve of COP30. It calls for centering economic resilience, value addition and green industrialisation in the climate agenda for developing countries.

Releasing the series, CSE Director General Sunita Narain said: "Inclusive and affordable development is critical for economic resilience and will help combat climate change."

"Countries need an economic stake in the green transition, which requires domestic manufacturing and job creation. For this, we must also reset global trade and finance rules for localisation and value addition.

"There is an opportunity to rethink these rules so that distributed local-led production systems can become the basis of green industrialisation," Narain added.

Focussing on three strategic fronts of the green transition -- agriculture and forest commodities, critical minerals, and clean technology and manufacturing -- the series presents a Southern perspective on how the Global South can participate and stay afloat in the new, green economy.

Across commodities, minerals and manufacturing, developing countries face a common dilemma: They supply the world's resources but capture too little of the value.

From raw cocoa and copper to lithium and solar cells, the green transition is repeating old patterns of extraction and dependence.

"The global green transition risks reproducing old inequities under a new climate-friendly banner, unless the Global South is empowered to capture greater value, diversify its economies, and shape the governance of emerging green industries," says Avantika Goswami, programme manager, climate change, CSE.

"We need to reinvent the climate agenda for the Global South. Calling for decarbonisation without economic resilience is no longer viable," she adds.

On agriculture and forest commodities, developing countries are trapped in a low-value export cycle -- they sell raw agricultural and forest commodities, and end up with almost nothing of the value, says the first paper in the series.

For instance, Ivory Coast and Ghana produce over 50 per cent of the world's cocoa beans; but, they account for a mere 6.2 per cent of the total export revenue from value-added products like chocolate and cocoa powder.

In contrast, manufacturers and retailers located in Global North countries capture almost 80-90 per cent of the total profit margin of a chocolate bar.

The paper argues that "a shift from raw exports to processing and diversification is critical".

On critical minerals, the Global South holds most of the world's reserves of critical minerals crucial for energy transition; but it captures little of the value generated from refining and manufacturing.

Says Goswami: "These countries remain exposed to commodity price volatility, balance-of-payments instability, and geopolitical risk."

Taking the cases of three countries -- Chile, Indonesia, and Congo -- the paper has analysed the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of their critical minerals policies and strategic plans and offers a list of principles for paving the way forward through centering equity and justice for the Global South in the climate-trade-development nexus.

On clean technology manufacturing, global clean tech manufacturing is concentrated in China, the EU and the US; developing countries in Latin America, Africa and Southeast Asia together account for less than 5 per cent of production value.

Meanwhile, the Global South faces a dual challenge of decarbonising while industrialising to meet the demands of a growing economy.

Structural asymmetries persist: Developing nations assemble goods but import value-heavy inputs.

This paper explores how countries can pursue green industrialisation by building clean-tech manufacturing capacity amid China's dominance, limited domestic capacities, and unequal participation in global trade.

Using case studies from China, India, Indonesia, and Mexico, it outlines key takeaways from country experiences in the clean technology sector, calling for renewed industrial policy, South-South cooperation, and global rule reform to build resilient economies.

The three papers present preliminary pathways for how developing countries can capture more value, earn more revenue and emerge as strong players in the new green economy for combating climate change.

Says Narain: "The future green economy must not mirror the inequalities of the old one. The Global South needs not just a greener world -- but a fairer one, with economic resilience at its core, in hand with climate action."

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Sunita Narain makes excellent points. The PLI scheme for renewable energy manufacturing is a step in the right direction, but we need more such policies. Developing countries can't just be suppliers - we must become manufacturers and innovators.
D
David E
While I agree with the overall sentiment, I think CSE should also acknowledge the progress India has made in renewable energy. We're not completely left behind - our solar capacity growth has been impressive. But yes, more needs to be done on the manufacturing front.
A
Ananya R
The cocoa example hits hard! Same story with our minerals and agricultural products. We export raw materials and import finished goods at higher prices. Time to change this pattern in the green economy too. 🍫→💰
S
Sarah B
South-South cooperation is the key! Instead of competing with each other, developing nations should collaborate on technology transfer and joint manufacturing. Together we can build a fairer green economy.
V
Vikram M
Developed countries talk about climate justice but continue the same exploitative practices. They want our minerals for their EVs and solar panels but don't want us to build our own industries. Hypocrisy at its finest! 😠

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50