UAE

COP28: US climate envoy backs ‘some phasing out’ of fossil fuels to reach NetZero targets

Kerry
US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry speaks during a press conference at the United Nations climate summit in Dubai on December 6, 2023.
Image Credit: AFP

Dubai: The world will need to phase out ‘some’ fossil fuels – while employing carbon capture technology – to reach NetZero targets by 2050, special US climate envoy John Kerry said at the UAE COP28 conference on Wednesday.

While addressing the media to comment on the US’s significant achievements during the climate conference, Kerry said, “The science says we have to reduce the emissions. It doesn’t prescribe some particular discipline that has to be done (where) it says to reduce the emissions.

“And so we believe that that means that if you’re going to reduce the emissions and you’re going to hit the target that zero by 2050, you have to do some phasing out… there’s no other way to get to that target,” said Kerry.

He said the goals are to phase out fossil fuels from energy systems by 2050 by focusing carbon capture technologies on the hardest-to-abate sectors, like steel, cement, aluminium, copper, etc.

Will changes in leadership shift policies?

When asked if the US’s position on climate matters would change if American leadership were to change into Republic hands, Kerry said, “There was a time when that might have made all the difference, but not now. When Donald Trump (former American president) pulled out of the Paris Agreement and zero-funded it for four years—no money— that became part of our problem when President Biden came in. However, something else happened in America. We have a renewable portfolio law across all our states; all 50 states have passed such laws.

“Even when Donald Trump was President, 75 per cent of the new electricity in the United States came from renewables. So, while he may have pulled out of the Paris Agreement, the American people stayed in that agreement. The shift has taken over. I say with complete confidence that we will transition to a global low-carbon, no-carbon economy.

“The only question is whether we will get there in time to avoid the worst consequences of this crisis.”

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