British Prime Minister Boris Johnson with European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel, President of the European Council at the @G7 Summit earlier today. Photo credit: @10DowningStreet|Twitter
Cornwall: G7 leaders would launch the G7 Industrial Decarbonisation Agenda, a first-of-its-kind platform to accelerate innovation, deploy decarbonisation technology, and harmonise standards. The Leaders also will emphasise sectoral decarbonisation in power, transport, agriculture, and buildings.
At the G7 summit today, US President Joe Biden and fellow G7 leaders agreed to a set of concrete actions to accelerate the global transition away from coal generation as part of efforts to combat the climate crisis.
It was pointed out that confronting the climate crisis presents a historic opportunity to drive our economic recovery, create millions of good-paying union jobs, and build back better as we invest in a more resilient, prosperous, equitable, and secure future.
Recognising that unabated coal power generation is the single biggest source of greenhouse gas emissions globally, and consistent with President Biden’s domestic leadership, White House said it was agreed that G7 Leaders will commit to an end to new direct government support for unabated international thermal coal power generation by the end of this year.
Also read: US shares its plan to defeat the COVID-19 pandemic in 2022 with G7
To support key developing countries in their transitions away from unabated coal, Canada, Germany, the UK, and the United States will also include a new collective commitment to provide up to $2 billion to support the work of the Climate Investments Funds focused on accelerating the transition from coal for key developing countries while investing in technology, job training, and infrastructure to enable the transition to a more reliable and prosperous clean energy economy.
Hard-to-abate heavy industrial sectors like cement and steel will play a key role in this transition.
Additionally, for the first time in history, all G7 Leaders will align their long-term and short-term climate goals in a manner consistent with keeping the 1.5 degrees Celsius global warming threshold within reach. Leaders will also resolve to strengthen adaptation and resilience to protect people from the impacts of climate change and to halt and reverse biodiversity loss, as well as to mobilize finance and leverage innovation to reach these goals.
“To fully address the climate crisis, we also must recognize and focus on the role of conservation. This is why the United States supports the G7 goal of conserving or protecting at least 30 percent of global land and marine areas by 2030 – a commitment grounded in scientific evidence that has shown increasing conservation is critical for maintaining the health and productivity of our ecosystems for generations to come,” a White House release stated today.
Domestically, President Biden is advancing policies that will achieve carbon-pollution free energy in electricity generation by 2035. These policies will support scale up of technology that captures carbon and then permanently sequesters or utilizes that captured carbon, which includes lowering the cost of carbon capture retrofits for existing power plants — all while ensuring that overburdened communities are protected from increases in cumulative pollution.
Meanwhile, G7 leaders were also scheduled to discuss the 100 Days Mission, “an ambitious but essential mission to have safe and effective vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics within 100 days of a future pandemic threat being identified”.
The UK Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, and Melinda French Gates were scheduled to address leaders at the Carbis Bay Summit, setting out how governments, industry, international organisations and others should work together to speed up the world’s response to future pandemic threats.
– global bihari bureau