this post was submitted on 06 Dec 2023
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They did, the pledge includes focusing on methane emission reduction as well as putting a stop on all private funding for coal.
I'm glad for both of these things and neither necessarily reduces fossil fuel consumption
So, both coal and methane are fossil fuels. This is according to the International Energy Agency, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Environmental Defense Fund, and Carbon Brief (UK-based group focused on climate science, climate policy, and energy policy). When it comes to methane specifically, it's the best green house gas when it comes to heat-trapping potential. So with the whole temperature rising component to global warming, it's an ideal fossil fuel to focus on, even according to MIT (https://climate.mit.edu/ask-mit/why-do-we-compare-methane-carbon-dioxide-over-100-year-timeframe-are-we-underrating).
i think we're on the same page but disconnecting on the word 'consumption'
this is all great and I'm glad for it. i hope to see reduction in consumption too
Coal lives on private funding primarily, so in the big picture, stopping that is cutting coal off at the knee’s. With methane, regardless if it’s leaky pipes from previous consumption or active consumption, it’s one of the best moves to make by the numbers, no ifs, ands, or buts about it. What else were you expecting from the conference? These are attainable goals, I’d say.
Edit: In addition to the 300% increase in renewables also decided on at the conference as well. The conference was held in a country overflowing with oil too. Odd choice certainly, but glad we have an attainable plan which will result in benefits environmentally if followed.
preventing private investments could give state enterprises like Coal India an advantage, not sure that's good. then using public money to repair private gas pipelines is good because they might actually get fixed. as I've alluded to, both seem pretty okay to me.
something else i wish they would have committed to is a reduction in consumption of coal, oil, and natural gas/methane.
Is that not an indirect benefit to more widespread use of renewables? Not just now, but even more, through the ability to find better methods to go about the process via substantially more use and funding as well.
It could be if a three fold increase in renewable production from current levels outpaces demand growth over the same period. If it doesn't, then it won't.
I suspect that if it did out pace demand growth, they would have mentioned it because that would be remarkable, and the arithmetic to see if this would happen isn't challenging
Are you expecting a 300% increase in energy consumption over six years?