by AP January 28, 2016
United Nations – The UN
secretary-general on Wednesday challenged investors around the world to at
least double their investments in clean energy by 2020, saying that “we must
begin the shift away from fossil fuels immediately.”
Ban Ki-moon told an investor summit
on climate risk that increasing investment in clean energy is critical in
following up on the landmark agreement to tackle climate change reached in
Paris last year.
Ban said about $330 billion was
invested in clean energy last year, but that is far from what he calls the
“clean trillion” needed per year in the decades to come.
The UN chief also said he has
invited all of the world’s heads of states and government to attend an April 22
signing ceremony for the climate agreement, and that 55 countries’ signatures
are needed to put the agreement into effect.
The UN and some world leaders have
been reaching out to the business community since the Paris agreement, urgently
seeking financial support for efforts to slow rising global temperatures.
“Sustainable, clean energy is
growing, but not nearly fast enough to meet energy demand,” Ban said Wednesday.
But last week, the head of the
International Energy Agency, which advises oil-importing countries, told global
leaders and business executives at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the
plunge in oil prices is a growing threat to the world’s goal to reduce
emissions through the increase in renewable energies.
Fatih Birol said energy efficiency
has been driven largely not so much by environmental concerns but an interest
in saving money, which is disappearing as fossil fuels become cheaper.
And the head of the International
Chamber of Commerce, John Danilovich, told The Associated Press in Davos that
adapting investment to meet the lower-emissions goals in the Paris agreement
will be among several struggles for global businesses this year.
But France’s environment minister,
Segolene Royal, told Wednesday’s investor summit that lower oil prices make the
search for more oil less attractive. She said the “time is ripe” to remove
subsidies for fossil fuel and introduce a price on carbon dioxide pollution.
She said 60 countries and regions are now paying for such emissions through
taxes or carbon markets.
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