A game-changer? G7 climate pledge could shift Asia’s coal policy

Asia consumes about three-quarters of the world’s coal, but will an end to new funding for the dirty fuel from G7 nations be enough to catalyse a shift to clean power in the region?

G7 2021
G7 leaders committed to stop by the end of 2021 new overseas funding for coal-fired plants that are not fitted with technology to reduce their planet-warming carbon emissions. Image: Wikimedia CommonsCC BY-SA 4.0

The G7 wealthy nations failed to go far enough at their weekend summit to halt the use of coal, but a pledge to phase out international funding for new coal power this year could help shift Asia’s policy on the dirty fuel, analysts said on Monday.

At a meeting in Britain, leaders of the powerful group of nations said they supported “a green revolution” and committed to stop by the end of 2021 new overseas funding for coal-fired plants that are not fitted with technology to reduce their planet-warming carbon emissions.

Green groups welcomed the move, which had been expected after it was recently agreed by environment ministers.

But climate campaigners criticised G7 leaders for not signing up to specific targets on ending the use of coal at home, and for offering insufficient new funding to help developing nations shift to renewable energy.

“After decades of rising emissions, just a statement on limiting coal-fired power by G7 (via) direct funding can hardly be seen as going far enough,” said Shobhakar Dhakal, vice president for academic affairs at the Thailand-based Asian Institute of Technology.

The commitment would have been stronger with a clear timeline for phasing out fossil fuel infrastructure, added Dhakal, a professor in the department of energy, environment and climate change.

But it could nonetheless prove a “game-changer” in Asia-Pacific where coal remains a mainstay for power generation, he said in emailed comments.

Without Asia changing course, the world cannot meet any meaningful global targets.

Shobhakar Dhakal, vice president for academic affairs, Asian Institute of Technology

The region consumed about 77 per cent of the world’s coal in 2019, up from half 20 years ago, according to BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy.

The G7 decision to end new overseas coal funding will ratchet up pressure on Asian countries, from economic giants such as China to fast-developing economies like Bangladesh and Cambodia, to move away from coal, Dhakal said.

“Without Asia changing course, the world cannot meet any meaningful global targets,” he added.

But others said Asian nations were unlikely to be swayed, given the G7 themselves spent more money on fossil fuel projects than clean energy between January 2020 and March 2021, according to academic Danny Marks.

“They won’t see it as a game-changer but merely just words,” said Marks, assistant professor of environmental politics and policy at Dublin City University in Ireland.

An end to coal financing from the G7 could push Asian nations to turn to China for funding in a bid to boost energy security, he added.

“This announcement could actually backfire against the G7’s aim and increase China’s growing influence in its own region,” he said.

More cash?

Governments and energy firms are being pushed to wean themselves off fossil fuels, whose continued production and use are viewed as a big threat to the 2015 Paris Agreement goals of capping global warming at “well below” 2 degrees Celsius and ideally 1.5C.

But that lower limit looks hard to reach partly because of new coal plants being built in Asia, the biggest energy-consuming region and largest growth market.

Coal power infrastructure in Asia relies heavily on state-backed financing from China, South Korea and Japan.

Seoul, in April, pledged to end international coal financing.

But Japan — a member of the G7 alongside the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany and Italy — has been criticised for not making clear its intentions on coal, including its consideration of backing for new projects in Bangladesh.

“If Japan has serious willpower to respond to climate change, it should be cancelling all the planned projects,” said Sejong Youn, a director at Solutions for Our Climate, a Seoul-based nonprofit.

In a joint communique, the G7 leaders said donors planned to commit up to $2 billion in the coming year to a programme led by the multilateral Climate Investment Funds to accelerate the transition away from coal.

The money, in the form of cheap loans, is expected to mobilise up to $10 billion in co-financing, including from the private sector, to support renewable energy deployment in developing and emerging economies, the statement added.

But Youn said new finance commitments at the G7 were not enough to turbo-charge a shift to renewables, leaving communities in Asia vulnerable to climate-linked disasters.

“(The green energy transition) requires investment, technology transfer and capital injection,” he added.

Other climate campaigners similarly urged G7 leaders to clarify how they would meet a promise by rich nations to raise $100 billion a year for poorer countries to adopt clean energy and adapt to a warmer planet, a goal on which they are lagging.

Only Germany and Canada offered new money at the weekend summit.

Nur Hidayati, executive director of the Jakarta-based Indonesian Forum for Environment, the country’s biggest green group, said this was “disappointing”, emphasising that developed nations should pay more because of their historical emissions.

“For communities in Asia, we are experiencing these climate impacts because most governments are still relying on coal and fossil fuels, and they will not transition to clean energy without the economic incentives,” she said.

Vulnerable communities

Clean energy investment in emerging and developing economies declined by 8 per cent to less than $150 billion in 2020, with only a slight rebound expected in 2021, the International Energy Agency said in a report this month.

Investment in clean energy in those countries needs to rise by more than seven times, topping $1 trillion per year by 2030, to put the world on track for net-zero emissions by 2050, the Paris-based watchdog added.

Without stronger action, the G7 is continuing to turn a blind eye to the world’s poorest and most marginalised people who are hit hardest by climate change, from rising sea levels to stronger cyclones, said Philippine activist Mitzi Jonelle Tan.

“They are the major economies, yet all they do year after year is pledging, committing, promises and no actual action,” said Tan, 23, a convener of Youth Advocates for Climate Action Philippines.

“None of the world leaders — not our national leaders and not in the G7 — are prioritising lives and the planet,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

This story was published with permission from Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate.

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