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Clean energy for world’s poor essential for achieving Millennium Development Goals: UN | The UN has emphasized the need for providing clean energy to the world’s underprivileged people as access to sustainable energy and increased efficiency is an essential condition to the achievement of the ambitious Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) envisaged by it. According to the new report from the UN, the lack of access to
modern energy is a significant barrier to economic development. Today, more than
1.6 billion people worldwide have no access to electricity and close to one billion
people depend on firewood, etc. as their energy supply for cooking and heating.
A reliable, affordable energy supply is key to economic growth and the alleviation
of poverty in the world, the report said. The new report provides both analysis
of the problems and present recommendations to the international community, specifically
on how to establish targets for increasing access to energy. By 2030 all people
should have access to modern energy services and there must be substantial increases
in energy efficiency, the report says. Another target in the report is to reduce
global energy intensity by 40 per cent by 2030 (the total energy consumption compared
with the Gross Domestic Product). The successful adoption of these measures would
reduce global energy intensity by 2.5 per cent per year – approximately double
the historic rate. This would also have a very significant impact on greenhouse
gas emissions while providing most countries with economic advantages, it said.
"It may seem impossible to provide worldwide access to modern energy forms while
also reducing global carbon emissions, but it is actually possible and the report
shows how. However, it will require global political will and the involvement
of all stakeholders from top politicians and the private sector to the individuals
living in the north as well as in the south, "says John Christensen head of the
UN Environment Programme, Risoe Centre. The International Energy Agency estimates
that expanding access to electricity to cover basic needs would result in only
a 1.3 per cent increase in greenhouse gas emissions. These emissions could be
further reduced through improved energy efficiency and the use of renewable or
cleaner sources of energy. This is a way to support a new energy development,
which is sustainable in the long run, it said. The report highlights that some
countries have already shown that it is possible and not just a dream to provide
more people with energy access, including Brazil, China, and Vietnam as well as
Denmark, Japan, Sweden, and California in the United States. These countries have
dramatically improved their energy efficiency. |
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