Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap G7 nations commit to phasing out coal by 2035 but give Japan some flexibility !

G7 nations commit to phasing out coal by 2035 but give Japan some flexibility

Time:2024-05-21 19:26:48 source:World Watchers news portal

MILAN (AP) — Energy and environment ministers of the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations committed Tuesday to phase out coal power by 2035, marking the first time the G7 has explicitly referenced a phase-out, but left flexibility for countries heavily reliant on coal.

The final communique of the meeting in the Italian city of Turin included language that could extend the 2035 deadline to a “timeframe consistent with limiting the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius” above pre-industrialized levels.

Italy’s environment and energy security minister, Gilberto Picchetto Fratin, emphasized the significance of targeting coal, “the source of most emissions.”

The communique puts a timeline to countries’ commitments made at the COP 28 conference last year in Dubai, which called for accelerating the phase-down of so-called unabated coal power, where emissions have not been captured.

Related information
  • Saudi Arabia is going to sponsor the WTA women's tennis rankings under a new partnership
  • Inspired by the times
  • China's forex reserves down in January
  • With record scale, China's consumer products expo shares opportunities, market with world
  • Mohammad Mokhber: Who is Iran’s acting president?
  • China's forex reserves down in January
  • Xi Sends Congratulatory Letter to 2023 Imperial Springs Int'l Forum
  • Times gone in a snap
Recommended content
  • Nadal returns to Roland Garros to practice amid doubts over fitness and form
  • Fighting to understand the concept of beauty
  • Inspired by the times
  • Xi Congratulates Madagascar's President on Re
  • Supreme Court rejects an appeal from a Canadian man once held at Guantanamo
  • Safety efforts urged after fatal boat accident