Coal under increasing financial pressure: activists by Staff Writers Paris (AFP) Dec 2, 2020 The coal industry is under increasing financial pressure, a coalition of environmental groups said Wednesday, but insurers are not ditching the polluting fuel fast enough to meet climate targets they warned. The fourth annual scorecard by the Insure Our Future campaign found that insurers around the world continue to retreat from coal, which is having a tangible tangible impact on coal mining and power companies. It cited a broker as saying coal developers are facing rate increases of up to 40 percent this year. "However, this momentum is not keeping up with the escalating climate crisis," they warned in the report. They cited one calculation that coal emissions need to drop drastically from this year if the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees C is to be met, but noted that as of July more than 737 gigawatts of new coal power was still in the pipeline or under construction worldwide. That is not far from the estimated 975 gigawatts the entire EU had in 2015, according to the CIA World Factbook. The report said major insurance companies in the United States, Britain and East Asia are still insuring coal. "Insurers, as society's risk managers, have a responsibility to actively support the Paris Agreement and global action to avoid climate breakdown," said the report by a group that includes Greenpeace and Rainforest Action Network among others. "They have the power to drive the transition to a low-carbon economy and strong business reasons to do so," they added, pointing to the share prices of fossil fuel companies that are underperforming the market. Meanwhile, wind and solar power has enjoyed strong growth and now generate electricity more cheaply than coal. The report found that US insurers lag behind their global peers, with big firms such as AIG, Berkshire Hathaway, and Travelers failing to take any action on fossil fuels at all. It also noted that all 10 US insurers in the scorecard continue to support organisations that are lobbying against climate action.
India's love affair with coal cools as pressure grows on sector New Delhi (AFP) Nov 24, 2020 Funding for coal projects in India has plunged for the second straight year, new figures showed Tuesday, as the world's second biggest coal importer weans itself off the dirty fuel. Research was released showing a drop in investment days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaffirmed the country's commitment to exceeding its targets under the Paris climate agreement. India has the world's fourth-largest reserves of the fossil fuel and its cities are often shrouded in coal-induced smog, but Modi o ... read more
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