![]() |
Now instead of finding ways to escape the heat, like this schoolboy in Tuvalu, islanders will use it to create energy |
Tiny
Pacific nations which are most at threat from rising seas have vowed to dump
diesel and other dirty expensive fuels blamed for causing global warming and
replace them with clean sources.
Using
coconut biofuel and solar panels, Tokelau -- which consists of three island
dots half way between New Zealand and Hawaii -- plans to become self-sufficient
in energy this year.
The leaders
of other so-called small island states around the world made commitments at a
meeting this week organized by the UN Development Program and the Barbados
government.
The Cook
Islands and Tuvalu in the Pacific are aiming to get all of their electricity
from renewable sources by 2020, while St. Vincent and the Grenadines in the
Caribbean is aiming for 60 percent from renewables by 2020.
And East
Timor's government vowed that no family in its capital, Dili, would be using
firewood for cooking by 2015 and said half the country's electricity would be
from renewable sources by the end of the decade.
"I
know we set ambitious targets, but it is actually exciting," Cook Islands
Prime Minister Henry Puna told AFP.
"We
don't see those targets as being difficult. It is very inspiring and that is
what is motivating us to get going."
Puna said
about 15 percent of the New Zealand-dependency country's budget is spent on
importing diesel oil. He has called it a "crippling dependence".
He wants
those tens of millions of dollars spent on health and social services and
education for the approximately 20,000 inhabitants of 15 islands spread over
2.2 million square kilometers (850,000 square miles) in the Pacific.
The
government plans to start converting to solar panels and wind turbines. Already
nearly all houses have solar water heaters.
Work will
start on Rakahanga in the northern group of islands next year with help from
Japan. New Zealand is to fund the energy revolution in the southern islands.
Puna said
the energy change was proposed while campaigning for a 2010 election. "We
didn't realize, it but we were tapping into a reservoir of environmental
consciousness among our people. The reaction has been fantastic.
"Somewhere
in our makeup we are environmentally conscious people, because we have learned
to live off the land and off the sea, that is our heritage, that is our
tradition and we are just tapping into that again."
In North
America and many European countries there has been resistance to wind turbines
sprouting up on land and sea.
"There
may well be some in the Cook islands," said Puna. "But I think once
people realize and see the benefits from these instruments there will not be
too many problems."
UN studies
show that oil imports account for up to 30 percent of gross domestic product in
some Pacific countries, with prices bolstered by the huge distances it has to
be carried.
Ministers
at this week's meeting complained in a statement that despite their
"significant actions" to help ease global climate change,
international action has been "slow and grossly inadequate," given
the increasing threat to island nations from rising seas.
Their
declaration -- adopted ahead of next month's UN Conference on Sustainable
Development in Rio de Janeiro -- called for the new energy sources to be made
"accessible, affordable and adaptable," so all threatened island
states can take steps to adapt.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.