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SULTAN AL JABER HONOURED FOR LEADERSHIP AT COP28

▶ Minister receives World Energy Council award for overseeing climate deal

- JOHN DENNEHY

Dr Sultan Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, has been honoured by the World Energy Council for his leadership during the crucial Cop28 climate talks.

The Cop28 President won the Global Energy Transition Impact Award in recognitio­n of his role in overseeing a historic agreement at last year’s summit and in advancing the world’s energy transition.

Cop28 ended with a deal known as the UAE Consensus. Under the pact, many countries agreed to transition away from fossil fuels.

The award came as the World Energy Congress got under way in Rotterdam yesterday.

The four-day event gathers energy leaders to discuss the global picture.

Accepting the award in the Dutch city on Sunday, Dr Al Jaber said the Cop28 agreement was “a truly historic moment for climate diplomacy” and, during a time of geopolitic­al tension, “set a new standard for inclusivit­y”.

“We moved the world beyond self-interest for the common good and we set clear direction, guided by the science, for keeping our North Star of 1.5°C within reach,” said Dr Al Jaber, referring to the key climate threshold.

“We now need to show that same solidarity in turning an unpreceden­ted agreement into unpreceden­ted action.”

On energy transition, Dr Al Jaber said the global landscape had undergone many changes and wind and solar energy were registerin­g an eightfold expansion, with the UAE at the forefront of this growth.

“If you sail from here into the North Sea, you will meet a white wall of windmills that the UAE, through Masdar, has invested in. Projects like the London Array, Dudgeon, Dogger Bank and Baltic Eagle are helping make Europe a world leader in wind power,” he said. But Dr Al Jaber noted hydrocarbo­ns still represente­d 80 per cent of today’s energy mix and with energy demand set to grow by about a quarter in the next two decades, the world will need to replace the daily equivalent of more than 270 million barrels of oil, gas and coal.

“This is a massive political, social, economic, technologi­cal and engineerin­g challenge at the same time,” Dr Al Jaber said. “And every stakeholde­r has a critical role to play.”

Dr Al Jaber also repeated calls for countries to adopt comprehens­ive emission-reduction targets in their coming Nationally Determined Contributi­ons – a country’s national climate action plan – and for industries to collaborat­e on decarbonis­ation goals.

“Tripling renewable energy capacity is just the beginning,” Dr Al Jaber said. “We also need to expand nuclear, hydrogen, geothermal and other zero-carbon energies yet to be discovered or deployed.”

Dr Al Jaber also urged the adoption of emerging technology – especially artificial intelligen­ce – that could “make a game-changing difference”.

Dr Al Jaber, who is also managing director and group chief executive of Adnoc, called Cop28 a turning point in history. “It was the moment that the world got serious about the energy transition and got real about what the transition will actually take.”

The energy transition will “take time, it will happen in different places at different paces” he said, “and we cannot simply unplug the current energy system before the new one is built”.

Angela Wilkinson, secretary general and chief executive of the World Energy Council, who presented the award, said Dr Al Jaber’s commitment and persistenc­e have set a new direction in world energy “towards accelerati­ng decarbonis­ation with justice and resilience.”

Dr Al Jaber’s award was one of four “world energy leadership awards” presented at the council’s centennial dinner.

 ?? Cop28 ?? Dr Sultan Al Jaber receives the award from the World Energy Council secretary general and chief executive Angela Wilkinson
Cop28 Dr Sultan Al Jaber receives the award from the World Energy Council secretary general and chief executive Angela Wilkinson

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