On the opening day
of the UN Conference on Climate Change (COP21), New Zealand Prime Minister John
Key formally presented the Fossil Fuel Subsidy Reform Communiqué to Christiana
Figueres, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), on behalf of the Friends of Fossil Fuel Subsidy Reform, The Prince of
Wales’s Corporate Leaders Group and other supporters of the Communiqué.
The Communiqué calls on the international community to
increase efforts to phase out perverse subsidies to fossil fuels by promoting
policy transparency, ambitious reform and targeted support for the poorest.
“Fossil fuel
subsidy reform is the missing piece of the climate change puzzle. It’s
estimated that more than a third of global carbon emissions, between 1980 and
2010, were driven by fossil fuel subsidies,” said John Key. “Their elimination
would represent one seventh of the effort needed to achieve our target of
ensuring global temperatures do not rise by more than 2°C. As with any subsidy
reform, change will take courage and strong political will, but with oil prices
at record lows and the global focus on a low carbon future – the timing for this
reform has never been better”.
Governments spend over $500 billion of public resources
a year to keep domestic prices for oil, gas and coal artificially low. Removing
fossil fuel subsidies would reduce greenhouse gas emission by 10 per cent by
2050. It would also free up resources to invest in social and physical capital
like education, healthcare and infrastructure, while leveling the playing field
for renewable energy.
Christiana Figueres said "these subsidies
contribute to the inefficient use of fossil fuels, undermine the development of
energy efficient technologies, act as a drag on clean, green energy deployment
and in many developing countries do little to assist the poorest of the poor in
the first place. The huge sums involved globally could be better spent on
schools, health care, renewable energies and building resilient societies. The
current, very low oil prices are a good opportunity to really get going on this
issue."
Close to 40 countries have endorsed the Fossil Fuel
Subsidy Reform Communiqué, including Canada, Chile, France, Germany, Italy,
Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Peru, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Samoa, the
United Kingdom, the United States, Uganda and Uruguay.
Hakima El Haite, Environment Minister of Morocco,
candidate for the presidency of COP22, said: “Not only do fossil fuel subsidies
put a strain on government coffers but they also don’t help the poorest of
society.”
Eliminating fossil fuel subsidies can accelerate the economic shift needed to tackle climate change and remove one of the obstacles to delivering the low-carbon future COP21 is aiming for.
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