This report explores the implications of the transition to low-carbon and resource-efficient economies for skills, gender, and occupations.
This report discusses the current climate mitigation actions and co-benefits report by cities, and explains key lessons and opportunities for cities.
This working paper describes the findings from examining demand aggregation potential in Bengaluru, and found that there was significant potential to save energy in common services in apartment buildings,https://www.greengrowthknowledge.org/sectors/buildings and use solar energy to meet most needs.
This technical note tests a novel data collection approach that relies on crowdsourcing data from multinational enterprises with operations across many geographies. This is eventually intended to allow effective response to water crises, providing empirical, comparable, global information on the state of public water management.
This paper compares the lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) costs of dairy production across 13 countries and pork production across 10 countries to obtain insights about what causes higher or lower emissions.
CDP has analyzed climate-related information disclosed by some of the world’s biggest companies, and, based on these insights, provided recommendations to policymakers, financial regulators and supervisors on what actions to take to accelerate the transition to a low-carbon economy.
This report discusses weather and climate services in Africa, and provides guidance for policy and program-makers around public-private partnerships to increase financing in this sector.
This report discusses efforts to transform a one-way plastics usage system into a closed-loop system, illustrated with challenges, solutions, and national regulations.
This report looks into the state of implementation of chemical recycling technologies in Europe as a potential solution to help curb plastic pollution and waste management.
This report reveals that chemical recycling is polluting, energy intensive, and has a track record of technical failures, and concludes that it is impossible for chemical recycling to be a viable solution in the short window of time left to solve the plastic problem, especially at the scale needed.