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PRIVACY
Opinion

Where globalisation sits in the climate change debate - Ian Price explores

The impact of international trade on the environment is hotly debated  and rightly so

(Image: Getty Images)

The evidence on climate change could not be clearer. In 2016, global greenhouse gas emissions reached 31.2% above the 1990 level, while the snows of Kilimanjaro have melted more than 80% since 1912.

The impact of the massive changes to the climate can be seen everywhere and will have huge impacts on people around the world, with the world’s poorest seeing the impacts first and worst.

Wales has a much higher share of total emissions (30%) from industry compared to the rest of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ (22%). This is driven by our well-established cluster of heavy industry across south Wales.

 While total emissions from the Welsh industry have decreased by 37% since 1990, there is much more to be done.

 Industry in Wales will need the continued support and assistance of governments in Wales and Westminster to continue to make progress in future.  We need to move from words on paper to action on the ground.

2019 has seen repeated and co-ordinated international protests, with over a million young people in more than 100 countries calling for politicians and businesses to prioritise action to slow global warming.

From school strikes to the Extinction Rebellion, who have started a new wave of protests in London this week, these demonstrations emphasise that a lack of action will be catastrophic – for the planet and the generations to come. What does this mean for globalisation? And how does it impact the way that countries – and companies in Wales – trade?

It’s true that trade does have some negative effects. As the world has become more connected, producers and consumers have become increasingly disconnected, so that domestic carbon dioxide emissions can be generated for goods consumed elsewhere.