London, April 14, – Africa and
Asian countries are expected to take a strong stand on energy at the World
Bank/International Monetary Fund (IMF) spring meetings in Washington, next
week.
They would be pushing for the
Bretton Wood Institution to change the position that it would not officially be
funding coal-fired stations.
Access to energy is essential to
reducing poverty and with 1.6 billion people globally (645 million of whom, are
in Africa) lacking access to electricity, developing countries are likely to
push it to alter its stand.
United States (US) President,
Donald Trump, has been encouraging multilateral banks to move away from their
position on not financing coal production for energy but the problem has been
with climate change activists opposed to the production of coal to provide
electricity because of what they argue is the threat from carbon emissions.
The World Bank acknowledges that
access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy is vital to end
poverty, reach other United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
and critical for many countries to meet their climate change mitigation
targets.
Bold policy commitments, innovative
technology and increased private investments can help to get them there.
Developing nations are arguing
that advances in technology have made coal production cleaner through carbon
capture and storage.
With calls for growing
restrictions on the use of fossil fuels for electricity production, the world
would only reach 92 per cent electrification by 2030, according to the Bank
figures.
Such a situation would leave many
in the dark and unable to seize economic and social opportunities that can help
them lead better lives.
The Bank says on its website that
“its engagement in energy sector is designed to help client countries secure
affordable, reliable and sustainable energy supply needed to end extreme
poverty and promote shared prosperity”.
“This requires a concerted push
on sustainable options for energy access, including solar, wind, on-grid and
off-grid as well as other viable, low-carbon solutions that reflect every
country’s unique circumstances.’
It adds that “it is working with
a number of client countries on these fronts and to attract increased private
sector participation and investment in the sector”.
The US has signalled readiness to
lead a global alliance to make production cleaner and less destructive to the
environment.
This alliance has been embraced
by countries in Africa with coal reserves of 50 billion tonnes and which want
to use this fossil fuel as part of their energy mix - to provide electricity to
aid development.
Nigeria, for example, is
financing coal projects from the African development Bank that would constitute
about 30 per cent of its power mix.
Speaking about the global fossil
fuel alliance, last month, US Energy Secretary, Rick Perry, said his country
“would welcome and help lead a global alliance of countries willing to make
fossil fuels cleaner”.
“Development starts when you have
power. This is my message to Africa. America is truly your friend and partner.
And we are here to help Africa
use fossil fuels and use them cleanly with the world’s newest and best
technology.”
Bloomberg reported, last week,
that the Trump Administration has been pushing for the UN and multilateral
development bank funds to support the construction of highly efficient plants
that produce less greenhouse gas emissions than older designs as well as
construct ‘clean coal’ plants that employ carbon-capture technology to strip
out even more.
African countries have expressed
interest in technology that will reduce emissions while giving them the chance
to use fossil fuels for their benefit.
Director of Climate Change at
Kenya’s Ministry of Environment, Charles Mutai, has called for an
African-funded facility to tackle climate change on the continent.
“The increased climate change
vulnerability causes huge burdens in the continent, hence the need for
home-grown funding mechanism”, he said, at the Africa Regional Forum of Climate
Technology, in Nairobi.
GNA

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