New Delhi : Efforts to accelerate global actions to ensure that all people have access to clean energy and electricity received a lift as The IKEA Foundation and The Rockefeller Foundation have announced plans to launch a $1 billion fund to boost access to renewable energy in developing countries, and a consortium of organizations led by Kenya, Malawi and the Netherlands advanced a call to action for clean cooking.
At the same session, Google reaffirmed its commitment to source carbon-free energy for all of its operations in all places, at all times, by 2030, setting a high bar for other tech companies.
These announcements came in Monday as the UN opened a week of Ministerial Thematic Forums on energy.
The Forums, running from June 21 to 25, are part of an effort to engage governments, businesses and financial institutions to develop “energy compacts” that spell out plans to ensure universal access to clean energy and a pathway to net-zero emissions.
The Forums are focused on actions that would achieve the targets of Sustainable Development Goal 7 on energy by 2030.
This week’s ministerial meetings will lay the groundwork for the High-level Dialogue on Energy, a summit-level event to be held during the UN General Assembly this September.
In addition to the announcements, several other countries, businesses and organizations will present their “energy compact” plans during the week, with many others expected in September.
UN Secretary-General AntAnio Guterres told the opening of the Forum, “We are running far behind in the race against time to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 7 by 2030, and net-zero emissions by mid-century. Achieving universal energy access is crucial for delivering on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.”
He added, “The milestones are clear: by 2030, we must cut global emissions by 45 per cent compared to 2010; and then continue to net zero by 2050. We need to speed up — dramatically.
Announcing that September 20 would be the date he convenes the High-level Dialogue on Energy at the summit level, he called on “every country, city, financial institution and company to raise ambition and submit aEnergy Compacts’ to achieve SDG7 and net zero emissions.”
The Secretary-General called on countries to triple clean energy investment, provide electricity to the 760 million people who now live without it, and ensure clean cooking solutions for the 2.6 billion people still relying on harmful fuels.
He also called for a rapid scale-up of renewables, and to accelerate improvements in energy efficiency.
He repeated his call to phase out coal by 2030 in OECD countries, and by 2040 globally, and to phase out fossil fuel subsidies and re-direct those funds towards a just, inclusive energy transition that leaves no one behind and creates green jobs.
His specific calls are among the key recommendations made by five Technical Working Groups, which are issuing their reports this week to inform the Forums, setting out a proposed global roadmap for steps needed to achieve clean, affordable energy for all by 2030 and net-zero emissions by 2050.
The IKEA Foundation and The Rockefeller Foundation announced they will join forces to set up a $1 billion catalytic fund, committing $500 million each to scale up distributed renewable energy around the world.
This would generate power from sources such as mini-grids and off-grid sources that are located near the point of use, rather than centralized sources like power plants.
The combined funds will be overseen by a new global platform — launching this year — that will aim to rapidly channel development funds to projects on the ground. The initiative will be formalized as an Energy Compact in the weeks ahead.
“We have the responsibility and the opportunity to keep global warming below the 1.5 degrees C ceiling,” said Per Heggenes, CEO of the IKEA Foundation.
“COVID-19 has divided the world in two, with one part of the world falling farther behind,” said Rajiv J. Shah, President of The Rockefeller Foundation.
“This is our opportunity to build back better on a global scale — harnessing public and private funding and the latest renewable energy technologies. Too many people are still left behind without the reliable, clean electricity that’s needed to go to school and study in the evening, to work and grow a business or to access modern healthcare.
The Rockefeller Foundation and the IKEA Foundation are investing $1 billion to empower people everywhere and combat climate change, and we call on governments, global Institutions and the private sector to join us.”