Western Daily Press

Big nations fail to agree ‘end of coal’

- EMILY BEAMENT Press Associatio­n

DOZENS of countries have signed up to moves to curb the use of fossil fuel energy to limit dangerous global warming at key Cop26 climate talks.

In efforts hailed as putting the end of coal in sight after 250 years, at least 23 nations made new commitment­s to phase out coal power, including five of the top 20 users, Indonesia, South Korea, Poland, Vietnam, Chile and Ukraine.

The world’s biggest polluter, China, along with other major users and producers – the United States, India and Australia – are not part of the efforts, prompting warnings the end will not come soon enough. Despite signing up to the new commitment­s, Indonesia has left itself the option of building new plants, while Poland has only pledged to phase out coal in the 2040s.

Separately, 28 new members, including six countries, have signed up to the UK-led “powering past coal alliance”, which includes firm dates to phase out the use of the most polluting fossil fuel.

In another move, 25 countries, including the US, Canada, Italy and Denmark, have signed a UK-led joint statement committing to ending internatio­nal public support for the unabated fossil fuel energy sector by the end of 2022 and to focus on clean energy instead.

The push at the crucial conference in Glasgow comes as scientists warn that carbon emissions from fossil fuels look set to rebound to close to pre-pandemic levels in 2021 – and could even rise further in 2022.

Some 46 countries have signed up to a UK-led non-binding coal to clean power transition statement, including the 23 making commitment­s for the first time to phase out coal. The statement commits countries signing up to ending all investment in new coal power generation domestical­ly and internatio­nally and rapidly scaling up deployment of clean power generation.

It also sees them commit to phasing out coal power in the 2030s for major economies and the 2040s for the rest of the world and to ensure the shift away from coal power is fair and benefits workers and communitie­s, though signatorie­s do not have to commit to all parts of the statement.

Jennifer Morgan, Greenpeace Internatio­nal executive director, said: “This is one more nail in the coffin of coal, but only one, and the coffin is not yet sealed.”

She said the signature of countries such as Vietnam and Egypt were “more proof that coal is dying”, but warned that “without the USA, Australia, China and India, there’s still a very real danger that the end won’t come soon enough.”

She said the deadline of the 2030s for richer countries was a “loophole” that could allow Germany to stick to its “way too late” 2038 phase-out date, adding: “So, there’s been some heavy spin here, but, even taking that into account, this is still a bad day for coal.”

Shadow business secretary Ed Miliband said: “Any progress towards powering past coal is welcome, but glaring gaps remain. There is no commitment from large emitters like China to stop increasing coal at home, and nothing on the phase-out of other fossil fuels.”

Cop26 President Alok Sharma said: “Thanks to a package of support from the UK and our internatio­nal partners, a 190-strong coalition has today agreed to phase out coal power and support for new coal power plants. I think we can say with confidence that coal is no longer king.”

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