Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Business Energy

G7 ministers set big new targets for solar and wind capacity

Members to increase offshore wind capacity by 150 GW by 2030, solar capacity to over 1 TW



German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Canadian foreign minister Melanie Joly applaud to students playing music in their welcoming event for G7 Foreign Ministers' meeting in Karuizawa, Japan, April 16, 2023.
Image Credit: Reuters

Sapporo, Japan: The Group of Seven rich nations on Sunday set big new collective targets for solar power and offshore wind capacity, agreeing to speed up renewable energy development and move towards a quicker phase-out of fossil fuels.

But they stopped short of endorsing a 2030 deadline for phasing out coal that Canada and other members had pushed for, and left the door open for continued investment in gas, saying that sector could help address potential energy shortfalls.

“In the midst of an unprecedented energy crisis, it’s important to come up with measures to tackle climate change and promote energy security at the same time,” Japanese industry minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told a news conference.

“While acknowledging that there are diverse pathways to achieve carbon neutral, we agreed on the importance of aiming for a common goal toward 2050,” he said.

Renewable fuel sources and energy security have taken on a new urgency following Russia’s war against of Ukraine.

Advertisement

“Initially people thought that climate action and action on energy security potentially were in conflict. But discussions which we had and which are reflected in the communique are that they actually work together,” said Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada’s minister of natural resources.

In their communique, the members pledged to collectively increase offshore wind capacity by 150 gigawatts by 2030 and solar capacity to more than 1 terawatt.

They agreed to accelerate “the phase-out of unabated fossil fuels” - the burning of fossil fuels without using technology to capture the resulting CO2 emissions - to achieve net zero in energy systems by 2050 at the latest.

On coal, the countries agreed to prioritise “concrete and timely steps” towards accelerating the phase-out of “domestic, unabated coal power generation”, as a part of a commitment last year to achieve at least a “predominantly” decarbonised power sector by 2035.

Canada was clear that unabated coal-fired power should be phased out by 2030, and Ottawa, Britain and some other G7 members committed to that date, Canada’s Wilkinson told Reuters.

Advertisement

“Others are still trying to figure out how they could get there within their relevant timeframe,” Wilkinson said.

“We are trying to find ways (for) some who are more coal-dependent than others to find technical pathways how to do that,” he said.

‘Huge statements’

“The solar and wind commitments are huge statements to the importance that they will rely on the energy superpowers of solar and wind in order to phase out fossil fuels,” said Dave Jones, who is head of data insights at energy think tank Ember.

“Hopefully this will provide a challenge to Japan, for which offshore wind is the missing part of the jigsaw that could see its power sector decarbonise much quicker than it thought possible.” Host country Japan, which depends on imports for nearly all its energy needs, wants to keep liquefied natural gas (LNG) as a transition fuel for at least 10 to 15 years.

The G7 members said investment in the gas sector “can be appropriate” to address potential market shortfalls provoked by the crisis in Ukraine, if implemented in a manner consistent with climate objectives.

Advertisement

They targeted 2040 for reducing additional plastic pollution to zero, bringing the target forward by a decade.

Advertisement