Christiana Figueres told the 2014 Investor Summit on Climate Risk at UN headquarters that the switch to greener investments is essential to tackle climate change.
"The continued and dangerous rise in greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is in large part the direct result of past investments in energy and mobility systems based on the use of fossil fuels," she said.
Figueres said new investments must help reverse "this unsustainable trend, and quickly, if the world is to have a chance of staying under a 2 degree Celsius (3.6 degree Fahrenheit) temperature rise."
According to the International Energy Agency, USD 36 trillion of global investment will be needed in clean energy by 2050 to meet this goal, which amounts to USD 1 trillion a year.
More From This Section
Last year, investment in renewable energy and energy smart technologies dropped 12 per cent to USD 254 billion, after falling 9 per cent in 2012 to USD 288.9 billion from the record USD 317.9 billion in 2011, according to figures released yesterday by the research company Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
But he said there has been an investment surge in Japan, an increase in India, and broader investments in clean energy in Asia and Latin America.
Figueres told The Associated Press that in 2012, about USD 600 billion was invested in exploration and extraction of fossil fuels, double the investment in clean energy.
Figueres said the lower level of investment in clean energy is not surprising "because we have built the global economy for 150 years on the back of fossil fuels.