CAFOD: Action and ambition
needed on climate change
Renewable energy, solar panels and wind turbines. |
As the COP24 Climate Conference continues in Poland, CAFOD
the official aid agency for the Catholic Church in England and Wales, stresses
the importance of committing to renewable energy and what message it is
bringing to this summit.
By Lydia O’Kane
A new report launched on Wednesday, as the COP24 climate
talks continue in Katowice, Poland, found that Denmark and Britain are the top
countries when it comes to taking action to fight climate change. Denmark has
decarbonised its electricity sector, moving away from coal, installing
renewables and reducing fossil fuel subsidies by 90 percent over the last
decade. Britain, meanwhile, plans to phase out coal-fired power generation by
2025, although it has lagged behind in phasing out fossil fuel subsidies. The
report by researchers from Britain's Imperial College, noted that coal has
provided two-fifths of the world's electricity for the past 30 years, barely
changing over the last decade as the falling share in most developed countries
is being countered by growing electricity demand in coal-reliant Asian
countries.
Urgent Action
Attending the COP24 summit is a delegation from CAFOD, the
official aid agency for the Catholic Church in England and Wales. Speaking just
before his departure by coach with supporters, in a bid to reduce their carbon
footprint, the agency’s Director of Advocacy, Neil Thorns said, “I think if you
look at the signs of the times around us; if you look at the number of floods
that we have seen. We’ve seen fires; we’ve seen higher temperature rises,
all in this year. There’s been consistent records broken across this
year. I think if you look at the science, the science report which was released
by the IPCC scientists; the inter-governmental panel of scientists, they
couldn’t have been clearer on the urgency of this issue”.
The switch to renewables
Asked if there was a fear factor with regard to switching to
renewable energy and if so, can it be overcome? Thorns said, it can be,
and cited the UK as an example of a country committed to the use of renewables.
“The real question is, I think when it comes to the question of renewables and
the switch; so much of our economies are based on fossil fuels… it’s a
shift both in terms of attitude and the economics around it and it’s a shift in
terms of, there are some very vested interests who want to keep us using and
exploiting, if you like, the earth’s resources. He added, that from a
scientific, economic or even a moral point of view, the shift to renewables “is
actually a good one; it makes sense for all of our interests, whether you’re in
a rich country; whether you’re in a poor country.”
CAFOD’s message
The Director of Advocacy said that CAFOD will be making its
presence felt at this COP24 summit by calling for action for not only this
generation but, also for future generations. “Our partners”, he
underlined, “are already seeing the impacts of climate change on the ground and
we know that the message that we need to bring there is (A) ambition, so we
need action and we need it quickly; we need money”, adding that rich countries
need to commit to the levels of funding they have pledged.
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