G20 countries fail to reach agreement on cutting
fossil fuels
Fossil fuel-producing members dispute goal of tripling
renewable capacity by 2030
Reuters in Panaji
Sat 22 Jul 2023 22.39 BST
The G20
bloc of wealthy economies meeting in India failed to reach a consensus on
phasing down fossil fuels on Saturday after objections by some producer
nations.
Scientists
and campaigners are exasperated by international bodies’ foot-dragging on
action to curb global heating even as extreme weather across the northern
hemisphere underlined the climate crisis facing the world.
The G20
member countries together account for more than three-quarters of global
emissions and gross domestic product, so a cumulative effort by the group to
decarbonise is crucial in the global fight against climate breakdown.
However,
disagreements including the intended tripling of renewable energy capacities by
2030 resulted in officials issuing an outcome statement and a chair summary
instead of a joint communique at the end of their four-day meeting in Panaji,
the capital of the Indian coastal state of Goa.
A joint
communique is issued when there is complete agreement between member nations on
all issues.
“We had a
complete agreement on 22 out of 29 paragraphs, and seven paragraphs constitute
the chair summary,” said the Indian power minister, RK Singh.
Sections
urging developed countries to deliver on the goal of jointly mobilising $100bn
(£78bn)a year for climate action in developing economies from 2020-25, and a
description of the war in Ukraine, also eluded consensus.
Fossil fuel
use became a lightning rod in daylong discussions, but officials failed to
reach consensus over curbing “unabated” use and argued over the language to
describe the pathway to cut emissions, two sources familiar with the matter
said.
A draft
late on Friday reviewed by Reuters read: “The importance of making efforts
towards phase down of unabated fossil fuels, in line with different national
circumstances, was emphasised.”
However,
the chair statement released on Saturday evening included concerns from some
member nations that were missing in the Friday draft, saying “others had
different views on the matter that abatement and removal technologies will
address such concerns”.
Singh, in a
press briefing after the conference, said some countries wanted to use carbon
capture instead of a phase-down of fossil fuels. He did not name the countries.
Saudi
Arabia, Russia, China, South Africa and Indonesia are all known to oppose the
goal of tripling renewable energy capacity this decade.
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