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About 1.3
bn of the world's 7bn people have no access to energy
(AFP/File, Jay Directo)
|
OSLO — UN
chief Ban Ki-moon, who himself studied by candlelight as a child, pleaded on
Monday for universal access to clean energy, a privilege denied to more than
half the world population.
"We
need an energy revolution," Ban said at an energy conference in Oslo.
"We
need energy not only to be universal, we need it to be clean and sustainable as
well," he added.
Improving
access to energy was key to addressing global challenges like poverty, climate
change, water scarcity, lacking health care and food shortages, Ban said.
About 1.3
billion of the world's seven billion people have no access to energy, while
another 2.7 billion are without clean cooking facilities, using coal and wood
for domestic tasks, according to a study published Monday by the International
Energy Agency (IEA).
"For
me, this is anything but academic. It is how I grew up in Korea. I studied by
candlelight. Refrigerators, air-conditioning or a simple fan were just a
far-off luxury that didn't touch our lives," Ban, 67, said.
"When
I was growing up, Korea had to go through the Korean war and abject
poverty," he said.
The Oslo
conference, organised by Norway and the IEA and attended by representatives of
more than 70 countries, is looking at ways to finance clean energy for all
people in developing countries.
The UN has
set three goals to be achieved by 2030, Ban recalled: universal access to
modern energy services, a 40 percent improvement in energy efficiency, and a
doubling of renewable energy.
The IEA
study shows that 48 billion dollars would be needed per year to guarantee
access to modern energy services by 2030, or a little more than five times the
amount currently earmarked.
"This
is really a small amount," IEA chief economist Fatih Birol said, adding:
"It is only three percent of the global energy investments."
Birol said
the use of dirty fuels for cooking was the second-leading cause of premature
death behind AIDS, responsible for killing 1.5 million women and children each
year.
"If
you don't find a solution to this problem, very soon it will be the primary
source of premature death worldwide..., which is unacceptable," he said.
Financially
feasible, universal access to energy would only lead to a 1.1 percent rise in
global energy demand, since poor households would still be limited in their
consumption, and a 0.7 percent rise in greenhouse gas emissions, according to
the IEA.
"The
implications are very small. There are no real tensions between the targets of
providing energy access and the issues of energy security and climate
change," Birol concluded.
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