UN Warns Of Worsening Energy Poverty Among Poor Nations

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Richard Ginika Izuora

 

The United Nations, UN, has advised countries, especially developing economies to formulate policies that balances the need for urgency and sustainability and also accelerate renewable energy transition.

The UN warns that there is a risk of short-term energy policies that might set developing countries on a course for a high-emission and expensive energy future.

It says that as the world charts its way forward, its plans must safeguard its commitments to the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, as it raised concerns that the rising costs of energy may price out many developing countries, especially the most vulnerable communities, from energy markets.

These countries, according to the United Nations Global Crisis Response Group (GCRG) on Food, Energy and Finance, are already bearing the brunt of the cost-of-living crisis, having experienced major setbacks on access to energy and progress on sustainable development since the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report expressed fears that there could be a potential “scramble for fuel” whereby only countries paying the highest prices can access energy, adding that governments, therefore, need the fiscal space to support their most vulnerable populations to avoid worsening levels of energy poverty or losing energy access altogether.

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At the same time, without policies that balance the need for urgency and sustainability, there is a risk of short-term energy policies that might set developing countries on a course for a high-emission and expensive energy future. As the world charts its way forward, its plans must safeguard its commitments to the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

UN Secretary-General, GCRG, António Guterres, said: “Developing countries don’t lack reasons to invest in renewables. Many of them are living with the severe impacts of the climate crisis including storms, wildfires, floods and droughts. What they lack are concrete, workable options,”

The GCRG’s third brief makes it clear that the war in Ukraine and the global energy crisis that it has caused is a stark reminder of the need for energy resilience and stronger push for the transition to renewable energy.

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However, to accelerate the transition, and as outlined by the Secretary-General, policies, including social protection measures for those affected by the transition, technology, subsidies, investments and materials to support renewables need to be in place and readily available.

The brief stresses that any short-term policies and protection measures must help mitigate the crisis, including efforts to promote energy efficiency and demand reduction, and not exacerbate it, such as blanket subsidies for fossil fuels.

In the medium-to-long-term, the world needs to double down on renewables to meet net-zero goals, tackle energy poverty, and boost and diversify the global energy mix. To that end, the brief calls for the need to significantly increase global investment.

“Renewable energy is often the cheapest, and most quick to deploy source of electricity for many countries. But this is only true if we ensure that supply chains work well and without bottlenecks; that the workforce has the right skills and that enough funds will be made available for the initial investments,” said Rebeca Grynspan, the Secretary-General of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), who coordinates and leads on the development of the GCRG’s briefs.

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“To meet these conditions we have to scale up financing and technology transfer for the developing countries and the energy poor of the world,” she added at the launch.

According to the brief, an ambitious renewable energy transition, that includes skills training, could create an additional 85 million jobs in renewable energy sources, efficiency, and other energy transition-related sectors by 2030.

Moreover, renewable energy production is often the least-cost energy production source with the shortest installation times, and provides countries with energy security, reducing future exposure to the volatility of oil, gas and coal prices.

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