The Ministers of Energy, Climate and Environment of the industrialized countries of the G7 committed this Sunday, April 16 to “accelerate” their « sortie » fossil fuels in all sectors, but without setting a new deadline.

This new objective, announced in a joint statement at the end of a ministerial meeting of the G7 on the Climate which has been held since Saturday in Sapporo (northern Japan), does not concern fossil fuels with capture and storage devices. CO2.

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The G7 countries (United States, Japan, Germany, France, United Kingdom, Italy and Canada) confine themselves to stressing that this objective is part of their efforts to achieve energy carbon neutrality by 2050. ” at the latest “.

Last year, the G7 had already committed to decarbonizing its electricity sector for the most part by 2035, a goal reconfirmed on Sunday.

Sign of their difficult negotiations, the G7 did not manage to commit specifically to a date for phasing out coal for their electricity generation, while the United Kingdom, supported by France, had proposed the deadline for 2030.

“Strong progress” according to the French minister

The decision to get out of all fossil fuels nevertheless marks a “strong progress”reacted to AFP the French Minister of Energy Transition Agnès Pannier-Runacher.

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“It is an important point of support for being able to broaden this approach” at the G20 in India and at the UN climate conference (COP28) in Dubai at the end of the year“, she estimated, while admitting that these future global negotiations”are not going to be obvious.

The club of the main industrialized countries had to show unity and voluntarism after the last alarming summary report of the intergovernmental group on climate change (IPCC), published in March.

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According to the IPCC, global warming caused by human activity will reach 1.5°C compared to the pre-industrial era from the years 2030-2035. This further jeopardizes the goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement to limit the rise in temperatures to this level, or at least well below 2°C.

The G7 also reaffirmed this Sunday its commitment to work with other developed countries to raise 100 billion dollars a year for emerging countries against global warming, a promise dating from 2009 and which was initially to be kept from 2020.

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A summit to improve access to climate finance for developing countries, a sensitive and crucial point for the success of COP28, is notably scheduled for the end of June in Paris.

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Due to the very tense global geopolitical context with the war in Ukraine since last year, and conservative proposals from Japan, which notably wanted the G7 to endorse upstream investments in gas, environmental NGOs feared that the Sapporo meeting would not result in a regression of commitments on the climate.

In a similar tone to last year, the G7 acknowledged in its communiqué that investments in natural gas “could be appropriate” to help certain countries avoid possible energy shortages linked to the war in Ukraine.

But at the same time, the G7 stressed the primacy of an energy transition ” own “ and the need to reduce gas demand.

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Japan’s other proposal to have ammonia and hydrogen recognized as co-fuels “clean” for the thermal power stations was also surrounded by railings. These technologies must be developed from sources “low carbon and renewable”insisted the G7.

In terms of the environment, the group’s countries have notably committed to reducing their plastic pollution to zero by 2040, thanks in particular to the circular economy, the reduction or abandonment of disposable and non-recyclable plastics.

It’s a goal ” ambitious “welcomed the German Minister of the Environment Steffi Lemke during a press conference.

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