Albuquerque Journal

G-7 officials pledge to end coal use by 2035

Target for electric vehicles to dominate sales set for 2030

- BY FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — Officials from the Group of Seven wealthy nations announced Friday that they will aim to largely end greenhouse gas emissions from their power sectors by 2035, making it highly unlikely that those countries will burn coal for electricit­y beyond that date.

Ministers from the G-7 countries meeting in Berlin also announced a target for a “highly decarboniz­ed road sector by 2030,” meaning that electric vehicles would dominate new car sales by the end of the decade.

And, in a move aimed at ending the recurring conflict between rich and poor nations during internatio­nal climate talks, the G-7 recognized for the first time the need to provide developing countries with additional financial aid to cope with the loss and damage caused by global warming.

The agreements, which will be put to leaders next month at the G-7 summit in Elmau, Germany, were largely welcomed by climate activists.

“The 2035 target for power sector decarbonis­ation is a real breakthrou­gh. In practice, this means countries need to phase out coal by 2030 at the latest,” said Luca Bergamasch­i, director of Rome-based campaign group ECCO.

Coal is a heavily polluting fossil fuel responsibl­e for a fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans. While there are ways to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide from the burning of coal, experts say it is almost impossible to reduce it to zero, meaning it will likely have to be the first fossil fuel to be phased out.

G-7 members Britain, France and Italy have already set themselves deadlines to stop burning coal for electricit­y in the next few years. Germany and Canada are aiming for 2030; Japan wants more time; while the Biden administra­tion has set a target of ending fossil fuel use for electricit­y generation in the United States by 2035.

A common target would pressure other major polluters to follow suit and build on the compromise deal reached at last year’s U.N. climate summit, where nations committed merely to “phase down” rather than “phase out” coal — with no fixed date.

U.S. climate envoy John Kerry called the agreements “very comprehens­ive and forwardlea­ning.” “I think it will help lay the groundwork for what has to happen at the G-20,” he told the Associated Press, referring to a meeting later this year of 20 economies responsibl­e for 80% of global emissions.

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