Fossil fuels    Keep it in the ground
  G7 nations pledge to end fossil fuel subsidies by 2025          Leaders of the UK, US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the  EU urge all countries to join them in eliminating support for coal, oil  and gas in a decade               
   G7 leaders plant trees at Ise Jingu shrine in Kashikojima, Japan. Photograph: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images      Karl Mathiesen
   @karlmathiesen       Friday 27 May 2016 15.33 BST      The  G7  nations have for the first time set a deadline for the ending most  fossil fuel subsidies, saying government support for coal, oil and gas  should end by 2025.
   The leaders of the UK, US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and  the European Union encouraged all countries to join them in eliminating  “inefficient fossil fuel subsidies” within a decade. 
   “Given the fact that energy production and use account for around  two-thirds of global greenhouse gas emissions, we recognise the crucial  role that the energy sector has to play in combatting climate change,”  said the  leaders’ declaration,  issued at the end their summit in Japan. The pledge first entered into  G7 (then known as G8) declarations in 2009 but has until now lacked a  firm timeline.
   Shelagh Whitley, a research fellow at the Overseas Development  Institute, called it an “historic day” but said 2020 was a more  appropriate date if governments were serious about their commitments to  the global climate deal agreed in Paris in December.
   Across the G7, subsidies are already falling, assisted by falling commodity prices. A notable  exception is the UK,  which increased subsidies by opening up new tax breaks for North Sea  oil producers. Japan has been criticised for funding new coal projects,  both  at home and  abroad.
   “We already see [some in] the G7 going in the wrong direction since  Paris. Just because they are saying this [about fossil fuel subsidies],  it’s not a fait accompli,” said Whitley. Canada also  recently extended some subsidies for natural gas.
   The G7 joins the leaders of  the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and  the World Bank, who have previously called for an end to assistance for fossil fuel projects.
   The statement did not define precisely what the G7 consider to be a  subsidy. The word “inefficient” in the G7 text indicates subsidies that  distort energy markets. The  OECD estimates that this type of support for fossil fuels within its member states is $160-200bn (£109-136bn) each year. 
   But when the cost of damage from pollution and climate change is factored in,  the International Monetary Fund  has estimated that support increases to a staggering $5.3tn a year, or  $10m per minute. This is more than the total global spend on human  health.
   The OECD approach to measuring subsidies is likely to be the yardstick applied by the G7. The US and China recently  asked the OECD to oversee a peer review of each other’s subsidy programme.
   Whitley said another significant change from the G7 was the excision  of a past phrase that focused on subsidies for the “consumption” of  fuels. She said this meant the G7 could target subsidies for exploration  as well, not just the end use.
  theguardian.com |