This Week in Global Dev: #151: Live from London Climate Action Week

This Week in Global Dev: #151: Live from London Climate Action Week

As London Climate Action Week gets into full swing, we break down the key talking points from the conference so far. With the city in the midst of a scorching heat wave, the discussion of climate change feels even more urgent than usual. We explore the transactional landscape that developing nations face, where much-needed capital is increasingly tied to the private sector. Beyond the balance sheets, one of the current tensions is the collision between green ambitions and economic survival. From the push for rapid electrification to the rollout of Europe’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, African nations are being forced to thread a near-impossible needle: industrializing their economies while navigating low-carbon mandates. Complicating matters is a growing communications crisis within the sector itself. To secure funding and dodge political blowback, many NGOs are camouflaging their climate work under the banners of health, food, or energy security. However, driving the climate conversation underground risks leaving the communities most vulnerable to extreme weather out of the spotlight when they need it most. To bring you the latest from London Climate Action Week, Devex Business Editor David Ainsworth sits down with global development reporters Ayenat Mersie and Jesse Chase-Lubitz for the latest episode of our weekly podcast series. Against a backdrop of record-breaking heat in Europe and growing political pressure to slow climate ambition, Marcene Mitchell, senior vice president of climate change at WWF USA, joins Devex Executive Editor and Executive Vice President Kate Warren to make the case for staying the course. Marcene challenges the “small drop” argument — the idea that individual countries acting on climate don’t matter — and reframes clean energy and nature-based solutions not as a cost, but as an economic and strategic imperative. She breaks down how electrification and the AI-era’s energy demand can be decoupled from fossil fuels, why energy security is itself a climate argument, and what WWF USA — an organization most people associate with conservation — is quietly doing on climate finance and supply chains around the world. Learn how WWF USA is working globally to turn climate ambition into investable pipelines, and why the solutions to get there already exist. Sign up to the Devex Newswire and our other newsletters: https://www.devex.com/account/newsletters

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This Week in Global Dev: #152: US aid leadership changes and a controversial UN merger

This Week in Global Dev: #152: US aid leadership changes and a controversial UN merger

This week we discuss Jeremy Lewin’s departure from the U.S. State Department’s foreign aid bureau to the White House. His transition to the National Security Council ends a controversial leadership ma...

2 Heinä 34min

Special edition: Live from Hamburg: Can governments still invest in the future?

Special edition: Live from Hamburg: Can governments still invest in the future?

This special two-part edition of This Week in Global Development comes to you from the Hamburg Sustainability Conference, where leaders from across development, government, business and civil society ...

1 Heinä 1h 7min

Special edition: The blueprint for better lung cancer screening

Special edition: The blueprint for better lung cancer screening

In a special edition of the This Week in Global Development podcast, Devex cofounder and Executive Vice President Alan Robbins sits down with Brazilian thoracic surgeon Dr. Ricardo Sales do Santos to ...

30 Kesä 30min

Theory of Change: #5: Why Rachel Kyte doesn’t listen to climate polls

Theory of Change: #5: Why Rachel Kyte doesn’t listen to climate polls

Rachel Kyte has spent decades shaping global climate change policy — from the World Bank to the United Nations to the United Kingdom. More than a decade since the signing of the Paris climate agreem...

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Theory of Change: #4: William Easterly still believes development is freedom

Theory of Change: #4: William Easterly still believes development is freedom

Development economist William Easterly famously does not mince words about the disappointments of anti-poverty megaprojects and far-fetched foreign aid plans. For much of his career, Easterly has tak...

23 Kesä 59min

This Week in Global Dev: #150: Fact-checking US aid claims as the State Department continues to hire

This Week in Global Dev: #150: Fact-checking US aid claims as the State Department continues to hire

In our landmark 150th episode, we discuss a common theme in global development over the past 18 months: the state of U.S. foreign aid. We’re seeing the State Department steadily replenish its workforc...

18 Kesä 29min

Theory of Change: #3: Gayle Smith on the next fight for foreign aid

Theory of Change: #3: Gayle Smith on the next fight for foreign aid

U.S. foreign aid is undergoing one of the most tumultuous transformations in its history. The Department of Government Efficiency’s dismantling of USAID and transfer of its remaining programs to the ...

16 Kesä 1h 6min

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