September 21, 2023
By David Stanway
China climate envoy says phasing out
fossil fuels 'unrealistic'
Men stand by a car near a coal-fired
power plant in Shanghai, China October 21, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song/File
Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
SINGAPORE, Sept 22 (Reuters) - The complete
phasing-out of fossil fuels is not realistic, China's top climate
official said, adding that these climate-warming fuels must continue
to play a vital role in maintaining global energy security.
China is the world's biggest consumer of fossil
fuels including coal and oil, and its special climate envoy Xie
Zhenhua was responding to comments by ambassadors at a forum in
Beijing on Thursday ahead of the COP28 climate meeting in Dubai in
November. Reuters obtained a copy of text of Xie's speech, and a video
recording of the meeting.
Countries are under pressure to make more
ambitious pledges to tackle global warming after a U.N.-led global
"stocktake" said 20 gigatons of additional carbon dioxide
reductions would be needed this decade alone to keep temperatures from
exceeding the critical threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius.
The stocktake will be at the centre of
discussions at the COP28 climate meeting, with campaigners hoping it
will create the political will to set clear targets to end coal and
oil use.
Xie, however, said the intermittent nature of
renewable energy and the immaturity of key technologies like energy
storage means the world must continue to rely on fossil fuels to
safeguard economic growth.
"It is unrealistic to completely phase out fossil
fuel energy," said Xie, who will represent China at COP28 this year.
At climate talks in Glasgow in 2021, China led
efforts to change the language of the final agreement from "phasing
out" to "phasing down" fossil fuels. China also supports a bigger role
for abatement technologies like carbon capture and storage.
While ending fossil fuel use would not be on the
table at COP28, Xie said China was open to setting a global renewable
energy target as long as it took the divergent economic conditions of
different countries into account.
He also said he welcomed pledges made to him by
his U.S. counterpart John Kerry that a $100 billion annual fund to
help developing countries adapt to climate change would soon be made
available, adding it was "only a drop in the bucket".
China and the United States, the world's two
biggest greenhouse gas emitters, resumed
top-level climate talks in July after a hiatus brought about by
U.S. politician Nancy Pelosi's visit to the self-governing island of
Taiwan, which China claims.
China has rejected U.S. attempts to treat climate
change as a diplomatic "oasis" that can be separated from the broader
geopolitical tensions between the two sides, with U.S. trade sanctions
on Chinese solar panels still a sore point.
Xie said protectionism could drive up the price
of solar panels by 20-25% and hold back the energy transition, and
called on countries not to "politicise" cooperation in new energy.
He also reiterated China's opposition to the E.U. Carbon
Border Adjustment Mechanism, which will impose carbon tariffs on
imports from China and elsewhere.
(This story has been corrected to read 'to keep
temperatures from exceeding the critical threshold...' instead of
'rising below the critical threshold...' in paragraph 3)
Reporting by David Stanway; editing by
Miral Fahmy
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