Advertisement

19 countries vow to end overseas fossil fuel finance

  • AFP
  • Share

China, Japan and South Korea were not among the list of nations on the statement. Image: File

Advertisement

GLASGOW: Nineteen countries, including the United States, vowed Thursday to end direct funding for all unabated overseas fossil fuel projects by 2022, though major coal, oil and gas funders China, Japan and South Korea were absent from the pledge.

G20 nations last month agreed to end financial support for new unabated coal plants abroad, but Thursday’s commitment is the first of its kind to include oil and gas projects.

The British-led initiative saw countries and financial institutions agree to “end new direct public support for the international unabated fossil fuel energy sector by the end of 2022”.

“Investing in unabated fossil-related energy projects increasingly entails both social and economic risks… and has ensuing negative impacts on government revenue, local employment, taxpayers, utility ratepayers and public health,” signatories said a joint statement.

Unabated fossil fuel projects are those that do not deploy technology to absorb the carbon pollution they produce.

Advertisement

Announcing the initiative, Britain’s business minister Greg Hands said: “We must put public finance on the right side of history.”

“Ending international funding for all unabated fossil fuels is the next critical frontier we must deliver on if we are to keep 1.5C within reach,” he said, referring to the most ambitious Paris Agreement climate goal.

The International Energy Agency says that to keep 1.5C in play there must be no new fossil fuel projects — domestic or overseas — from today.

Recent research by Oil Change International showed that between 2018 and 2020, the G20 funded overseas fossil fuel projects to the tune of $188 billion, mainly through multilateral development banks.

These institutions were not covered by Thursday’s pledge, which was cautiously welcomed by environmental groups.

China, Japan and South Korea, all major backers of overseas fossil fuel projects, also did not sign on.

Advertisement

“Last year at this time I would not have thought we would see countries commit to ending billions of dollars in support for international fossil fuel projects,” said Kate DeAngelis, international finance program manager at Friends of the Earth US.

“While this is welcome progress, countries, especially the US, must hold firm to these commitments, shutting off the spigot to fossil fuel companies.”

Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Live News.


Advertisement
End of Story
BOL Stories of the day
Doha Summit: Leaders from 50 Arab-Islamic Nations to attend emergency meeting in Doha
Trump warns Israel after Doha strike, “Qatar Is a Great Ally of the U.S”
Indian team captain failed to brings up Pahalgam incident and Operation Sandoor in victory speech
Petroleum Minister: Local oil could reshape Pakistan’s economic future
Iranian singer Omid Jahan dies at 43 after on-stage heart attack
Sri Lanka crush Bangladesh by six wickets in Asia Cup clash
Next Article
Exit mobile version