The Guardian (USA)

Twenty countries pledge end to finance for overseas fossil fuel projects

- Fiona Harvey and Patrick Greenfield in Glasgow

More than 20 countries and financial institutio­ns will halt all financing for fossil fuel developmen­t overseas and divert the spending to green energy instead from next year.

The move marks a significan­t boost for the transition to clean fuels. The Guardian understand­s the countries involved include the US, UK, Denmark and some developing countries that would receive such finance, including Costa Rica. The European Investment Bank is one of the financial institutio­ns involved.

Diverting their funding from fossil fuels to low-carbon efforts will generate an estimated $8bn a year around the world for clean energy. The agreement will prevent the funding of any fossil fuel developmen­t, including gas, though there are provisions for loopholes.

However, China and Japan, two big funders of fossil fuel developmen­t around the world, have shunned the initiative.

The countries involved will also be able to continue developing their own fossil fuel resources at home, including oil and gas fields.

The US has at least 24 pending fossil fuel projects representi­ng more than 1.6 gigatons of potential greenhouse gas emissions. The UK is licensing new oil and gas fields in the North Sea, despite hosting the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow.

The UK will also be able to press ahead with funding a controvers­ial gasfield in Mozambique, because that project is already in the pipeline and the initiative covers only new investment­s. Funding for fossil fuels from private sources will also not be affected by the agreement.

The move also builds on the UK’s efforts to end the overseas financing of coal, as president of the G7 this year as well as host of Cop26.

The G7 agreed in May to stop funding coal developmen­t overseas, despite resistance from Japan, and China – one of the biggest funders of coal developmen­t around the world.

Collin Rees, the programme manager at the Oil Change Internatio­nal campaign group, said the initiative, which will be made public on Thursday when the Cop26 summit is focusing on energy issues, would mark a major change in outlook for fossil fuel investment around the world.

He said: “This is a massive step forward. This represents a serious chunk of the current internatio­nal public finance for fossil fuels. It’s a really big thing, though there may be some devil in the detail.”

Rees pointed to the advice of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, published in May, that found all new developmen­t of fossil fuel resources globally must end after this year if the world was to limit global heating to 1.5C above preindustr­ial levels.

“This move is significan­t in light of the IEA report,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Wind turbines in Costa Rica, one of the developing countries that would have received fossil fuel developmen­t finance.
Photograph: Reuters Wind turbines in Costa Rica, one of the developing countries that would have received fossil fuel developmen­t finance.

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