Showing posts with label Energy - about 2.5 billion people now have little or no access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy - about 2.5 billion people now have little or no access. Show all posts

Friday, 30 September 2011

Unite Nations Secretary-General's Message on World Habitat Day - October 3, 2011

Celebrations in 2011 

Secretary-General's Message on World Habitat Day 2011

This year, World Habitat Day falls during the month when demographers predict our planet’s seven billionth inhabitant will be born.  The future that this child and its generation will inherit depends to a great degree on how we handle the competing pressures of growing population growth, urbanization and climate change.
Experts predict that by the year 2050, the global population will have increased by 50 per cent from what it was in 1999.  Also by that time, scientists say, global greenhouse gas emissions must decrease by 50 per cent compared to levels at the turn of the millennium.  I call this the “50-50-50 challenge”.

Rising sea levels are a major impact of climate change — and an urgent concern.  Sixty million people now live within one metre of sea level.  By the end of the century, that number will jump to 130 million.  Major coastal cities — such as Cairo, New York, Karachi, Kolkata, Belem, New Orleans, Shanghai, Tokyo, Lagos, Miami and Amsterdam — could face serious threats from storm surges.
The nexus between urbanization and climate change is real and potentially deadly.
Cities are centres of industrialization and sources of emissions, but they are also home to solutions.  More and more municipalities are harnessing wind, solar and geothermal energy, contributing to green growth and improving environmental protection.
Local efforts are critical to success, but they must be supported by international initiatives.  We have already seen progress, including the creation of the Climate Change Adaptation Fund and adoption of the action plan to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation, known as “REDD plus”.  All countries agree on the goal of limiting global temperature rise to below 2° C.  Developed and developing countries have committed to lower greenhouse gasses in a formal, accountable international agreement.
Now we need to build on these advances.  The United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban this December must achieve decisive progress.  Urbanization will be on the agenda at next year’s “Rio+20” United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development.
On this observance of World Habitat Day, let us reaffirm our commitment to the important journey to a more sustainable future, and let us focus greater attention on addressing climate change in the world’s cities and beyond.
Ban Ki-moon

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

World should double renewable energy by 2030-UN

OSLO, June 2 (Reuters) - The world should more than double reliance on renewable energy by 2030 as part of goals to slow climate change in a drive that will need strong backing from the private sector, a senior U.N. official said on Thursday.

"The new goal is to have 30 percent of energy supplies from renewable sources by 2030," Kandeh Yumkella, head of the U.N. Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), told Reuters in a telephone interview.

About 13 percent of energy used now comes from renewable sources, mostly firewood burnt in developing nations where many people lack electricity for needs such as lighting or heating. Hydro, wind, geothermal and solar power play smaller roles.

The renewables target would add to a U.N. drive to widen supplies of electricity to everyone by 2030 -- about 2.5 billion people now have little or no access -- and to improve world energy efficiency by 40 percent by 2030, he said.

The push, to be known as the "30/30/30" goals, would be part of efforts to end poverty in developing nations and to combat global warming that the U.N. panel of experts says will bring more heatwaves, droughts, mudslides and rising sea levels.

Yumkella, chair of U.N.-Energy which coordinates energy work by U.N. agencies, also praised a drive for partnerships between the public and private sectors outlined on Thursday. "Without good public-private platforms we can't do this," he said.

"Our dream is that we get a pledge of maybe 40 billion or more by the middle of next year for these goals from private companies," he said.

Earth Summit

Yumkella said that U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon would formally launch the 2030 energy goals this year, aiming for adoption by world leaders at a once-a-decade Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in June 2012 as part of a shift to a green economy.

It was unclear what it would cost to widen renewable energy use to 30 percent of all energy by 2030, he said.

Earlier estimates show that ensuring access to electricity for all by 2030 would require an extra $35 to $40 billion of capital every year.

Boosting energy efficiency by 40 percent by 2030 need $30 to $35 billion a year for the poorest nations, and $140 to $170 billion a year for middle income countries.

Last month, the U.N. panel of climate scientists said the world could get up to almost 80 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2050, with the right policies to shift from fossil fuels such as coal and oil.

"My proposal is: 'what can we achieve in the next 20 years?'. Based on the analysis we have done it is possible to have 30 percent (of renewables) by 2030," Yumkella said.

He praised the alliance to raise public-pivate energy investments involving the world's biggest utilities such as American Electric Power (AEP) (AEP.N) in the non-profit Global Sustainable Electricity Partnership.

Among successful projects were an 86-kilowatt hydroelectric station in Patagonia, Argentina, to provide power to the rural community of Cochico, and a wind and diesel hybrid system of the same size to supply the village of Chorriaca.

Duke Energy (DUK.N) helped lead the private investments in the Patagonia projects. Johane Meagher, Executive Director of the non-profit partnership, said that the Patagonia examples could be models for electricity in other parts of the world.

Companies say governments need predictable policies to attract investment. "Stability of policies is critical," said Paul Loeffelman, Head of International Cooperation Affairs at AEP.

World should double renewable energy by 2030-UN