Gulf News

‘90% of humanity not aware of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals’

Individual choice crucial for sustainabi­lity and prosperity

- Senior Reporter

Ninety per cent of the humanity are not aware of the ambitious United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), adopted by 193 nations last year to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all, a top UN official told Gulf News here yesterday.

“You ask your taxi driver or your brother [about it ] and see the answer,” Peter Thomson, President of the UN General Assembly, said on the sidelines of a press conference at seventh assembly of Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency (Irena).

He said only if individual­s are aware of SDGs, they can take it up as his or her right and then a responsibi­lity as well. “It is individual’s right and nobody can take away one’s right to developmen­t. If you want to make the economy sustainabl­e and competitiv­e in the next ten years, the individual­s must see the sustainabl­e developmen­t not just their right but as their responsibi­lity, too,” Thomson said.

He told the press conference that he had written to heads of states across the world, asking them to introduce SDGs in school curriculum. “Schools can be agents of change.”

Thomson and Adnan Z. Ameen, directorge­neral of Irena, said 2016 was remarkable with two positive developmen­ts — adoption of SDGs by the UN and the Paris Agreement that aims to check climate change by keeping a global temperatur­e rise this century well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Ameen said as energy sector was a major contributo­r to carbon emissions, its transforma­tion to clean energy will help the efforts to keep temperatur­e rise below 2 degrees. With the available technology, it is feasible to double the share of renewables in global energy mix by 2030, the Irena chief said.

Thomson said it was notable that many heads of states and a large number of ministers from across the world attended the Irena assembly.

The three-day assembly, attended by more than 1,000 officials from 150 nations, concluded yesterday. A report published by Irena highlighte­d how global investment in renewables had steadily grown for more than a decade, rising from less than $50 billion (Dh183.5 billion) in 2004 to a record $305 billion (Dh1.1 trillion) in 2015.

Solar PV (photovolta­ic) will grow the fastest in terms of capacity and output, and new ways to store electricit­y will be a game changer for growing variable renewable energy generation. Irena estimates that battery storage for electricit­y could increase from less than 1GW today to 250GW by 2030.

Off-grid renewables provide electricit­y to an estimated 90 million people worldwide, and enable people to climb the energy ladder. They are cost-effective and can be installed in modular fashion, linked to grid extension plans. Irena report described how off-grid solutions could provide modern energy access to hundreds of millions of more people and achieve developmen­t goals.

“Achieving universal electricit­y access by 2030, will require us to boost global power generation — nearly 60 per cent of that will have to come from stand-alone and mini-grid solutions,” Ameen said in the report.

 ?? Ahmed Kutty/Gulf News ?? Peter Thomson, President of the United Nations General Assembly and Adnan Z. Ameen, IRENA director-general, at the press conference in Abu Dhabi yesterday.
Ahmed Kutty/Gulf News Peter Thomson, President of the United Nations General Assembly and Adnan Z. Ameen, IRENA director-general, at the press conference in Abu Dhabi yesterday.

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