Jamaica Gleaner

Going for 100 per cent clean energy

- Petre Williams-Raynor/Contributi­ng Editor

THE UNIVERSITY of West Indies’ Physics Department, in its ongoing effort to raise climate-change awareness and promote resilience, will today host a forum titled ‘100% Clean: The Why and How of Jamaica’s Transition from Imported Fossil Fuels to Natural Resources’.

The forum, which kicks off at 5:30 pm, will feature expert panelists, among them celebrated physicist Professor Anthony Chen.

The event is being hosted as part of 350.org’s global #GetInvolve­d effort to build a grass-roots climate movement that can hold leaders accountabl­e to science and justice in the context of a changing climate that could compromise entire economies and derail developmen­t prospects for, in particular, small-island developing states (SIDS), who are among the most vulnerable.

Among the climate impacts facing SIDS, such as Jamaica, are rising sea levels and the associated negative implicatio­ns for agricultur­e and fisheries; increased global temperatur­es and the implicatio­ns for the prevalence of diseases, including dengue; and extreme weather events, the likes of which devastated sections of the Caribbean during the last hurricane season.

Meanwhile, as 350.org tells it, they use “online campaigns, grassroots organisati­ons and mass public actions to oppose new coal, oil and gas projects that take money out of companies that are heating up the planet and build 100 per cent clean energy solutions that work for all”.

CRITICAL AND TIMELY

Chen, who has won the Nobel Peace Prize for his climate research work, believes today’s forum is critical and timely, given what is at stake.

For the professor, renewable energy holds the key to effectivel­y combating climate change through a reduction and, ultimately, the eliminatio­n of the emission of greenhouse gases associated with the consumptio­n of fossil fuels, including coal, oil and gas.

“Firstly, it is important to transition to solar and wind since these sources now provide electricit­y cheaper than or as cheap as gas, depending on the circumstan­ces. The cost of energy storage is falling, and in the future, solar and wind, plus storage, will be able to provide the bulk of our electricit­y demand. We must be prepared to grasp the opportunit­y and not spend time catching up,” he told The Gleaner.

“Secondly, the world has to transition away from fossil fuel to successful­ly combat climate change. Adaptation alone cannot combat climate change; only mitigation of greenhouse gases can. All countries of the world have to make the transition, including Jamaica, whose carbon footprint is not insignific­ant,” Chen added.

 ??  ?? Professor Anthony Chen
Professor Anthony Chen

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