Coal countries balk at G20 phaseout calls
Australia, India, China and Russia hold out against a
push to target coal.
BY KARL
MATHIESEN AND ESTHER WEBBER
October 30,
2021 9:04 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/coal-g20-rome/
ROME — A
group of coal users and coal exporters is blocking efforts for the G20 to call
for an end to coal use — something organizers had hoped would send a powerful
signal ahead of COP26 climate talks starting Sunday.
Diplomats
from the U.K. and Continental Europe are pressing for a commitment by the large
economies to phase out coal, a fuel responsible for about 44 percent of
man-made CO2 emissions.
But
Australia, India, China and Russia are holding out, a European diplomat said.
Australian
Prime Minister Scott Morrison arrived in Rome after a bloody fight to set a
domestic net-zero emissions target for 2050 — a goal that pointedly does not
aim to halt the country's lucrative coal exports.
"We
are not engaged in those sort of mandates and bans. That's not the Australian
government's policy, it won't be the Australian government's policy,"
Morrison said after talking to French President Emmanuel Macron, who asked him
to commit to ending the production and consumption of coal at home and abroad.
A
spokesperson for U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the British hosts of
the COP26 climate summit would continue to push Morrison: “We do believe
Australia can do more on areas such as coal.”
The G20
leaders will discuss climate change and energy on Sunday morning. Also on the
table in draft agreements seen by POLITICO were deals to end international coal
finance, ramp up action during the 2020s, reach net-zero emissions “by
mid-century,” and halt the construction of new coal plants “in the 2030s.”
Negotiations were continuing on Saturday evening and none of the specific
language had been settled.
The
economic and political interests of the regions where coal is mined and burned
are proving to be an obstacle for the organizers of the G20 and the upcoming
COP26.
In thrall
to coal
Some G20
countries — like China and India — owe their invite to the world’s club of
economic giants in large part to economic development fueled by coal and fear
the high price of shifting their energy mix.
Russia is a
large coal exporter, especially to China, and also uses the fuel at home.
Australia earns about 50 billion Australian dollars a year from coal exports.
Chris
Littlecott, associate director of the E3G think tank said: “The key dynamic I
see is the tactical alliance between coal exporter Australia — desperately trying to maintain export
markets and keen to promote further new coal construction — and major coal
users China and India, which have the biggest challenge ahead of them for
phasing out coal use.” But he said the fact that a push to end coal had reached
the G20 leaders' meeting was a significant signal.
Johnson
told reporters he had been “evangelical” about “the potential to move away from
coal" in a Friday call with Chinese President Xi Jinping, trying to
persuade him that ditching coal was not as hard as it seemed.
According
to Johnson, Xi told him: “China depends on it for our domestic economy.” But
Johnson was adamant that China, an economy more than five times the size of the
U.K., should look to the example of Britain which has gone from coal generating
40 percent of its power to nearly zero within a decade.
“It shows
how fast you can make the transition,” Johnson said.
China,
which has huge coal reserves but little oil and gas, fears relying on others
for its energy supplies, said Yan Qin, an analyst with Refinitiv.
In a
statement Saturday, Xi pointed to the “exceptional difficulties and concerns of
the developing countries” — among which China counts itself — and urged
developed countries to do more to tackle climate change.
Those
countries aren't alone in struggling to drop the fuel. U.S. President Joe Biden
arrived in Rome bruised from a battle in Congress where Senator Joe Manchin
from coal-producing West Virginia was holding up his key infrastructure and
climate package.
While the
U.S. is pushing for a broad climate effort at the G20, it has been publicly
quiet on coal. The U.S. blocked a push at this year’s G7 to set an end date for
a coal phaseout.
Although
the EU's position calls for an end to coal use, it is divided internally, with
some countries like Poland balking at the costs of a rapid exit from coal.
On to COP26
Hopes that
the G20 might still spur COP26 in Glasgow are pinned on Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi being pried away from the other coal countries. Modi is actually
in Rome, unlike Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin, and has been lobbied
personally by Western officials over the past year.
"He
gets it and he is more visionary than his negotiators," said the European
diplomat.
But that's
a big ask for India, which has not set any target for reaching net-zero
emissions and is counting on coal to fuel its industrialization.
“In India,
coal is seen as the bulwark of the power industry and fundamental to
livelihood, state revenues and sustainable development,” said Rajani Ranjan
Rashmi, India’s former lead climate negotiator and a program director at the
Energy & Resources Institute in New Delhi. “Seeing it as a mere source of
emissions and pollution would be counterproductive.”
If the
anti-coal drive fails in Rome, the fight will shift to Glasgow.
Johnson
said in parliament last week that President Joko Widodo of Indonesia was
planning to announce a 2040 coal phaseout date, which would represent a major
step forward for one of the world’s largest and most coal-dependent economies.
Organizers
of COP26 hope that by the end of the conference they can paint coal as a sector
in terminal decline and a bad investment. But while Johnson might be
evangelical about the need to give coal up, others are holding just as
religiously to a different future.
“The
Australian way is our path and that's what I'm here to talk about and be
faithful to,” said Morrison.
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