<div dir="ltr"><p>How green is your native land? The 4th edition of the <a href="http://dualcitizeninc.com/GGEI-Report2014.pdf" target="_blank">Global Green Economy Index</a>, produced by private U.S.-based consultancy <a href="http://dualcitizeninc.com/" target="_blank">Dual Citizen LLC</a>,
has just been released, and you can look it up. The index provides an
in-depth look at how 60 countries and 70 cities are doing in developing
more <a href="http://ecowatch.com/business/sustainable-business/">environmentally friendly economies</a>, in actual performance and in how experts perceive their performance.</p>
<p>“We first published the Global Green Economy Index in 2010 guided by a belief that the environment, <a href="http://ecowatch.com/climate-change-news/">climate change</a>
and green, low-carbon growth would rapidly become defining issues for
national policy makers and the global reputation of countries,” says the
report’s introduction. “As we went to press, 2,646 events in nearly 162
countries mobilized pressure on <a href="http://ecowatch.com/2014/09/24/un-climate-summit-ban-ki-moon/">over 100 world leaders gathered</a>
in New York at the United Nations to take substantive and binding
action on climate change. The link between these issues and the
reputation of leaders and nation states is more vivid today than ever
before.”</p>
<p>The 60 countries covered are a dramatic increase from the 27 included
in the last report in 2012. It assessed nations on every continent and
found that the Scandinavian countries, along with Germany, were clear
leaders. Sweden and Norway headed up the list of actual performance,
with Costa Rica ranking third, inside the top 15 for the first time, and
<a href="http://ecowatch.com/2014/05/14/germany-record-setting-renewables/">Germany</a> and <a href="http://ecowatch.com/2014/05/01/samso-renewable-energy-island-sustainable-communities/">Denmark</a>
rounding out the top five. Poland, Senegal, Qatar, Vietnam and Mongolia
bring up the rear in slots 56-60, with China just above them at 55. The
U.S. came in close to the middle, ranked at 28.</p>
<p>Perception was very different. The study found that some countries
got less credit than their green economies merited, while other
countries got too much credit for making environmentally friendly moves.
Austria, Iceland, Ireland, Portugal and Spain were among the European
countries that the index found needed “improved green country branding,”
along with the African nations of Ethiopia, Mauritius, Rwanda and
Zambia, the latter four all covered in the index for the first time.</p>
<p>Other countries, some of the world’s most developed nations,
including the U.S., Japan, the Netherlands and Australia, get more
credit than their lagging performance deserves. The U.S. came in sixth
in perception, while Japan, ranked 44th in performance, came
in seventh in perception.</p>
<a href="http://dualcitizeninc.com/GGEI-Report2014.pdf"><span class=""><img class="" src="http://ecowatch.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/top10countries.jpg" alt="top10countries" height="368" width="600"></span></a>Top 10 greenest countries based on performance. Chart credit: Dual Citizen LLC
<p>On the liability side, the index revealed that some of the world’s
fastest growing economies aren’t growing green economies. In addition to
<a href="http://ecowatch.com/2014/10/09/china-greenhouse-gas-emissions/">China</a>, rapidly growing countries like Ghana, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam are also doing poorly.</p>
<p>Four of the ten greenest cities were, unsurprisingly, in Scandinavia,
with Copenhagen in first place, Stockholm in third, Helsinki ninth and
Oslo tenth. The top ten was rounded out by Amsterdam (2), Vancouver (4),
London (5), Berlin (6), New York (7) and Singapore (8).</p></div>