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IEA sees global energy emissions peaking in 2025
by AFP Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Oct 27, 2022

World 'cannot afford any more greenwashing,' UN chief says
United Nations, United States (AFP) Oct 27, 2022 - Carbon neutrality goals are useless if not backed by action, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Thursday, stressing that the world cannot "afford any more greenwashing."

"Commitments to net zero are worth zero without the plans, policies and actions to back it up," he said in a video message marking the release of an annual assessment by the UN-Environment Programme on progress towards commitments made by signatories of the 2015 Paris climate deal.

"Global and national climate commitments are falling pitifully short," Guterres said in the video, which was released less than two weeks before the start of the UN COP27 climate conference in Egypt.

"In other words, we are headed for a global catastrophe," Guterres said.

He additionally called for closing the gap between what has been achieved and what is necessary to respect the Paris climate agreement's commitment to limit warming below 2 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels, and to 1.5C if possible.

The message's target audience was governments, in particular G20 countries, as well as private actors and financial institutions.

It comes as more and more governments, businesses and cities claim they are making commitments towards net zero, most often not to be achieved until 2050.

"Our world cannot afford any more greenwashing, fake movers or late movers," Guterres said.

The group of experts established by the secretary-general to develop standards and to assess carbon neutrality commitments by non-state actors such as companies, cities, regions and investors, is to report its conclusions at COP27.

Thousands of companies have announced carbon neutral targets, but many are suspected or even openly accused of not delivering on their commitments.

Such greenwashing is further facilitated by the lack of a common international framework to assess and oversee emission reduction commitments.

Guterres also brought up the need to invest "massively" in renewable energy, urging the creation of a "historic pact between G20 developed and emerging economies" to boost the energy transition.

The International Energy Agency said Thursday it believes global energy emissions will peak in 2025 as surging prices due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine propel investment in renewables.

Only last year the IEA said there was "no clear peak in sight" in energy emissions, but the new higher investment in wind and solar is setting up demand for all fossil fuels to peak or plateau, leading to a drop in emissions.

"The global energy crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine is causing profound and long-lasting changes that have the potential to hasten the transition to a more sustainable and secure energy system," the IEA said as it released its latest annual World Energy Outlook report.

Based on the latest measures and policies announced by governments in the face of soaring energy prices, the IEA forecasts global clean energy investment to rise by more than 50 percent from today's levels to $2 trillion per year by 2030.

Those measures will propel sustained gains in renewables and nuclear power.

"As a result, a high point for global emissions is reached in 2025," the IEA said.

Global energy-related CO2 emissions are then set to fall back slowly from a high point of 37 billion tonnes per year to 32 billion tonnes by 2050, it added.

The Paris-based organisation, which advises energy-consuming nations, said that its forecast sees demand for all types of fossil fuels peaking or hitting a plateau.

Coal use, which has seen a temporary bump higher, will drop back in the next few years as more renewables come online.

Natural gas hits a plateau at the end of the decade, instead of the previous forecast of a steady rise.

Oil demand levels off in the mid-2030s and then gradually declines towards mid-century due to uptake of electric vehicles, instead of the earlier estimate of a steady increase.

Overall, the share of fossil fuels in the global energy mix in the IEA's stated policies scenario falls from around 80 percent to just above 60 percent by 2050.

- Energy markets 'changed' -

"Energy markets and policies have changed as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, not just for the time being, but for decades to come," said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol in a statement as the report was released.

But that will still leave the world on track for a rise in global temperatures of around 2.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, which would likely trigger severe climate change impacts.

The IEA also has a scenario to arrive at zero net emissions in 2050, which is seen as necessary to hit the 1.5C warming target enshrined in the Paris climate pact.

That would require clean energy investments to rise to $4 trillion per year by 2030, instead of the current forecast of $2 trillion.

"The IEA, with all its expertise and authority is clear: clean energy investments must triple by 2030, and gas is a dead end," said Laurence Tubiana, head of the European Climate Foundation and France's former climate ambassador.

"The current European energy crisis clearly proves the dangers of gas: high price, volatility, geopolitical dependence," she added.

"We are approaching to the end of the golden age of gas," the IEA's Birol said at a later news conference.

The IEA's analyses show "that we are seeing a turning point in the history of energy and this crisis indeed accelerates clean energy transitions," he added.

However Birol noted that energy security, not climate change, is "the biggest driver for renewable" energy development currently.

Another motivation is that governments want to ensure they have got in on the manufacturing of new renewable energy technologies.

"The three drivers, when they come together, is the reason I am optimistic we are going to see an acceleration of clean energy technologies," Birol said.

- Russia takes $1tn hit -

The IEA's analyses also concluded that this energy crisis has also harmed Russia's long-term economic outlook.

By reducing natural gas supplies to European nations it has not only pushed them to accelerate their transition to renewables, but reduced the attractivity of gas in security terms while making it expensive for developing markets.

"Russia's role in the international energy affairs will be diminished, much diminished in terms of oil and gas trade," said Birol.

"As a result of the decline in oil and gas sales between now and 2030, Russia will lose about $1 trillion in export revenues" according to IEA calculations, he added.

burs-rl/rox


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ENERGY NEWS
UN's Guterres says continued fossil fuel reliance is 'stupid'
United Nations, United States (AFP) Oct 26, 2022
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Wednesday it would be "stupid" for the world to keep relying on fossil fuels, saying they triggered today's climate emergency. "If the world, and then particularly if Europe, had invested massively in the past two decades in renewable energy, we will not be facing the energy crisis that we are facing today," Guterres said in an interview with the BBC. "And the prices of oil and gas would not be as high as they are today," he added in response to a quest ... read more

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