April 17, 2023
1 min read

G7 still in dark over ending coal power use

More aggressive moves to reduce carbon emissions remain a highlighted difficulty for G7 as the world’s major industrialised economies continue to clash on coal…reports Asian Lite News

Sapporo (Japan), April 17 (IANS) The G7 ministers of Environment and Energy have failed to set a deadline for phasing out coal-powered energy despite vows for net-zero emissions as their two-day talks ended in the Japanese city of Sapporo.

The ministers on Sunday underlined G7’s commitment to “accelerating the clean energy transition to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050” in a 36-page statement released after the G7 Ministers’ Meeting on Climate, Energy and Environment held from Saturday to Sunday.

More aggressive moves to reduce carbon emissions remain a highlighted difficulty for G7 as the world’s major industrialised economies continue to clash on coal, Xinhua news agency reported.

Japan, as host of the meetings, was reluctant to agree to a specific time frame for ending the resource-poor country’s use of coal given its likely need to rely on the energy source for at least most of the 2030s, national news agency Kyodo reported.

The inclusion of natural gas within the phase-out goals adds pressure on Japan, which plans to rely on the energy source for around 20 per cent of its electricity generation in fiscal 2030, alongside coal for nearly 19 per cent and crude oil for nearly two per cent, the report added.

ALSO READ: G7 diplomats to grapple with Ukraine, China crises

Previous Story

Dhaka witnesses scorching days

Next Story

Myanmar envoy praises strong cultural ties with India

Latest from -Top News

Call to Greylist Pakistan Over Terror Links

Freddy Svane, the former Danish Ambassador to India, said that it is high time for the world to acknowledge that Pakistan remains the epicentre of terrorism in the region….reports Asian Lite News

Colombia backs India on terror

The change in tone from Colombia is seen as diplomatically significant, especially given its forthcoming role as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). In a diplomatic correction welcomed

Yunus under fire for poll claims

The backlash was sparked by Yunus’ comments during a visit to Japan earlier this week, where he reportedly said that “no one except one party wants elections in December.” Bangladesh’s fragile political
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Modi Meets Biden, World Leaders Post G7 Outreach Session

The visit to Italy is Prime Minister Modi’s first overseas

G-7 meet helps India strengthen ties with West

Narendra Modi expressed India’s intent in its deep democratic principles