While President Joe Biden’s top climate envoy John Kerry told world leaders at a virtual climate summit that the U.S. will fulfill its commitment to provide financial support to developing countries as they grapple with the deadly consequences of a warming planet, campaigners are urging the U.S. to follow the lead of European Union officials who on Monday pledged to stop subsidizing fossil fuels and instead invest in a just transition toward clean energy.
“Ending government support for fossil fuels is a no-brainer,” Laurie van der Burg of Oil Change International said Monday in a statement responding to the EU’s newly stated commitment to phasing out dirty energy subsidies and helping to fund a global push toward renewable energy. “Globally, governments are still propping up fossil fuels with huge sums of public money, behavior that is incompatible with keeping global warming below 1.5ºC.”
Oil Change International’s Collin Rees said that “today’s commitment by the EU to end overseas investment in oil, gas, and coal projects is yet another indication that the fossil fuel era is over. As a new administration takes power in Washington, this is a powerful signal that clean energy is ascendant and that the EU stands willing to work with President Biden and others to end all finance for dirty energy.”
Noting that Biden “has committed to end fossil fuel subsidies and dirty energy finance,” van der Burg pointed out that the UK in December “announced an end to their overseas public finance for fossil fuel.”
According to van der Burg, “This creates a powerful opportunity for the EU, UK, and U.S. to collaborate to finally end government-backed finance for oil, gas, and coal ahead of the UK-hosted UN climate summit in November.”
Rees argued that “Biden should act boldly on his campaign commitments to end finance for dirty energy projects.”
“By building on past commitments to end coal finance and extending this to oil and gas,” Rees added, “Biden can join the EU and UK in transforming international finance to address the challenges of the next century, not prop up the remnants of the last century’s infrastructure.”
Speaking at the Netherlands-hosted Climate Adaptation Summit just days after Biden issued an executive order re-entering the 2015 Paris agreement — the emissions reduction treaty the country had abandoned under former President Donald Trump — Kerry said the U.S. “was ‘proud to be back’ in the global climate discussion,” Reuters reported Monday.
“We intend to make good on our climate finance pledge,” Kerry said. According to Reuters, the U.S. “has delivered only $1 billion of the $3 billion it pledged under former President Barack Obama to the UN Green Climate Fund, set up to help vulnerable countries transition to clean energy and adapt to a warmer future.”
Three billion dollars is a tiny fraction of what impoverished countries will need to shield their populations from the risks of heatwaves, droughts, fires, floods, and other disasters that have intensified as a result of global warming.
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