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Article

16 May 2023

Author:
Climate, human rights, and energy advocates of 180 groups

G7: 180 CSOs call G7 countries to stop financing fossil fuels in climate-vulnerable nations

"Open Letter: G7 countries must not leave room for fossil fuels, climate destruction" 16 May 2023

As world leaders meet for the G7 Leaders Summit this week, We, the undersigned 180 organizations and supporters from regional and global movements and networks from 27 countries,  are raising our demand for powerful nations to stop peddling fossil fuels to developing countries. Climate and energy ministers fell short of their commitment to end fossil fuels – leaving the door open for investments in new fossil gas infrastructure and fossil fuel-based technologies heavily promoted by G7 host Japan. 

A glaring text in the G7 Climate and Energy Ministers’ Communique, “low-carbon and renewable hydrogen and its derivatives, such as ammonia should be developed," solidifies Japan’s efforts to use its position as G7 host to internationalize its fossil fuel and ammonia-heavy strategies under Green Transformation (GX) policy, which will mobilize over USD1.1 trillion in public and private capital over the next 10 years to overhaul 22 industrial sectors in Japan and provide partner countries with Japanese technology and finance. 

We reiterate that what Japan calls a “realistic energy transition" derails efforts for a just energy transition as GX heavily relies on the use of fossil fuel-based technologies, including liquified natural gas (LNG), the co-firing of ammonia, hydrogen, and biomass at existing fossil thermal plants, and carbon capture and storage. [...]

While ministers succeeded in pushing back against Japan’s push for natural gas and LNG, the Communiqué does not meet the condition under the IEA’s 1.5°C scenario, which shows that no new gas fields should be developed. At the same time, LNG projects already under construction should remain unutilized, and existing LNG capacity needs to be decommissioned early. Moreover, the lack of a deadline to end coal and the language of retaining “fully" and “predominantly" decarbonizing the power sector show weak signals of rich nations’ leadership.

We continue to demand clarity and more robust commitments on G7 countries’ plans to assist other countries in scaling up their energy transition and energy efficiency despite last year’s groundbreaking G7 commitment to end international public finance for fossil fuels by the end of 2022. The Communiqué claims that the G7 has met this commitment and has “ended" their international fossil fuel finance, but Oil Change International (OCI) analysis shows this is untrue. New OCI analysis shows that between 2020 and 2022, the G7 poured USD73 billion in public finance into new fossil fuel projects, 2.6 times their support for clean energy over the same period. While the UK, Canada, and France have delivered their commitment to ending this fossil fuel finance, Japan, Italy, and Germany have not. The US claims it has delivered on its commitment, but its fossil fuel finance policy is not publicly available.

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The G7 Leaders Summit will be crucial for the world’s most powerful nations to show climate leadership. G7 must translate words into concrete actions supporting the energy transition in developing countries. The time for vague commitments is long over. 

Therefore, we call on the presidents, prime ministers, and climate, energy, and environment ministers of Japan, the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and the European Union to uphold their commitments from the last G7 summit and follow through with the following demands: 

Reject Japan’s push for false energy transition solutions. According to Transition Zero, Japan’s mammoth USD1.1 trillion – financing on ammonia, hydrogen, nuclear, and carbon capture and storage through Green Transformation (GX) will not help attain net zero in Southeast Asia. Most ammonia and hydrogen are produced from fossil fuels including methane emissions vented throughout the gas lifecycle. Ammonia co-firing, one of the technologies Japan is pushing for in Southeast Asia, needs to cut emissions more to reach net zero in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines, even with the most technologically feasible co-firing rate (20% ammonia-80% coal). Ammonia produced from renewables should be saved for the hard-to-abate sectors, such as long-haul shipping. 

The critical 1.5-degree Celsius Paris Agreement threshold will be at risk if Japan successfully pushes the wrong technology in Asia. Thus, Japan must not be allowed to peddle its dirty energy strategy for Asia with its false solutions, which are nothing but greenwashing lies.

End financing for all fossil fuels including fossil gas, and agree to a time-bound commitment to phase out all fossil fuels. The International Energy Agency has said no “new oil and natural gas fields are needed" in the 2050 net-zero pathway. Furthermore, the IEA has declared that the golden age of gas is over. We can see this play out in Asia, as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has destroyed the growth of gas demand in the region due to skyrocketing prices and supply uncertainty. 

Yet, Japan, France, the UK, the US, Germany, and Italy are among Southeast Asia’s top financiers of post-Paris Agreement fossil gas projects. Developing more fossil gas plants and terminals is not just delaying climate action. It is also putting biodiversity and people’s livelihoods at risk. We reiterate that fossil gas is not a transition fuel. Instead, it is a risky and dangerous investment that will lock developing nations into decades of stranded assets, debt traps, and emissions. 

Commit to a fair and just mechanism to provide funding for the energy transition. Continued investments in fossil fuels create increased risks of stranded assets and shortfalls in government revenue as competition with cheaper and cleaner alternatives, such as solar and wind, grows and demand for fossil fuels declines. We urge G7 leaders to take advantage of investment opportunities in clean energy and promote a just and equitable transition away from all fossil fuels. 

The recent IPCC Synthesis Report was clear: the surest path to avoiding climate catastrophe is to phase out fossil fuels. Greenhouse gas emissions must be cut by almost half by 2030 to come in at or below the 1.5˚C limit, with further reductions to follow. This means all financing mechanisms, such as JETP and ETM, must not include fossil-based solutions consistently. 

People worldwide are also raising our demands to ensure our communities are protected from the economic and environmental consequences of fossil fuel dependence. As the window for crucial and meaningful actions narrows, the global movement against fossil fuels is widespread and will only get stronger. 

There’s no room for false energy transition solutions in developing nations. The world needs a clear, just, and equitable energy transition mechanism anchored on renewable energy. As powerful nations, G7 must commit to actions to phase out fossil fuels and ramp up renewable energy. A realistic energy transition must address the reality that the climate crisis requires ambitious and people-centered actions toward a real-zero pathway. 

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