UN chief Ban Ki-moon made a call to double global consumption of
renewable energy over the next two decades in order to ensure
sustainable economic development.
"It's possible if we show
political leadership," Ban said about the goal that falls under a
sustainable energy initiative aiming to have universal access to power
by 2030. Currently, renewable energy accounts for about 16 percent of
world consumption.
"We have to be very austere in using energy...
We have to completely change our behavior, at home, at the office," the
UN secretary-general added at an event hosted by the Center for Global
Development think-tank in Washington.
About 1.3 billion people on
Earth -- a fifth of the global population -- lacks access to
electricity, while 2.7 billion do not have clean fuel to cook their food
and heat their homes, relying instead on open fires or furnaces that
burn coal, wood or animal waste.
"Energy is central to jobs,
transport, water, sanitation... climate," Ban said after meeting with
finance ministers from the G20 most powerful economies.
The United
Nations is expecting some 120 heads of state and government to attend
the Rio+20 meeting on sustainable development in Brazil in June, with a
focus on developing a plan for implementation and action.
On
Monday, the European Union vowed fresh funds Monday to help developing
nations provide sustainable energy to 500 million people by 2030.
European
Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso pledged 50 million euros ($65
million) over two years for technical assistance and said EU nations
would seek hundreds of millions of euros more to support investments in
sustainable energy for developing countries.
Speaking at the
Center for Global Development event, Danish Development Cooperation
Minister Christian Friis Bach noted that fossil fuels received four to
five times more subsidies worldwide than renewable energy.
The
think-tank issued a report coinciding with the event saying the US
government should play a key role in helping meet the UN targets.
"The
United States is the logical country to lead an effort to address these
problems, given the size of its venture capital and investment
community, the prominence of its financial markets and exchanges, and
its tradition of support for business-oriented agencies," it said in a
statement.
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