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Asia's Growing Coal Use Could Negate Global Progress in Climate Change

Asia's Growing Coal Use Could Negate Global Progress in Climate Change
Asia's Growing Coal Use Could Negate Global Progress in Climate Change

Asia’s heavy and expanding reliance on coal power risks cancelling out global progress towards preventing catastrophic climate change, a top United Nations official warned Wednesday.
While developing economies such as India, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam increasingly turn to cheap coal to meet fast-growing demand for electricity, some nations are ramping up use of renewable energy, although its share of the total fuel mix for power generation is still small, Reuters reported.
Asian countries must set more ambitious goals to contribute to global efforts to curb climate change, said Ovais Sarmad, the deputy executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
“Very, Very Serious Problem”
“There are certain countries in this region still relying heavily on coal and fossil fuels as sources of energy, and in some areas that is growing,” he told Reuters in an interview.
“That’s a very, very serious problem because ... all those gains that had been made in other parts of the world would be completely negated.”
The comment came as officials of Asian nations met in the Thai capital Bangkok this week to discuss ways to spur regional, and global, efforts to fight climate change.
The Paris Agreement aims to limit the global average temperature increase to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius, while seeking to tighten the goal to 1.5 C. Current policies put the world on track for a rise of at least 3 C by century’s end.
Further warming could push the climate system closer to irreversible tipping points, scientists warn, raising the risk of harvest failures, forced migration, mass extinction of species, ecosystem collapse and societal breakdown.

 

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