Biden orders U.S. to stop financing new carbon-intense projects abroad
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[December 11, 2021] By
Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Biden
administration has ordered U.S. government agencies to immediately stop
financing new carbon-intensive fossil fuel projects overseas and
prioritize global collaborations to deploy clean energy technology,
according to U.S. diplomatic cables.
The cables, seen by Reuters, say U.S. government engagements should
reflect the goals set in an executive order issued at the start of the
year aimed at ending American financial support of coal and
carbon-intensive energy projects overseas.
"The goal of the policy ... is to ensure that the vast majority of U.S.
international energy engagements promote clean energy, advance
innovative technologies, boost U.S. cleantech competitiveness, and
support net-zero transitions, except in rare cases where there are
compelling national security, geostrategic, or development/energy access
benefits and no viable lower carbon alternatives accomplish the same
goals," a cable said.
The announcement was first reported by Bloomberg.
The policy defines "carbon-intensive” international energy engagements
as projects whose greenhouse gas intensity is above a threshold
lifecycle value of 250 grams of carbon dioxide per kilowatt hour and
includes coal, gas or oil.
The policy bans any U.S. government financing of overseas coal projects
that do not capture or only partially capture carbon emissions, allowing
federal agencies to engage on coal generation only if the project
demonstrates full emissions capture or is part of an accelerated
phaseout.
It exempts carbon-intensive projects for two reasons: they are deemed to
be needed for national security or geostrategic reasons or they are
crucial to deliver energy access to vulnerable areas.
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President Joe Biden delivers remarks on infrastructure at the Kansas
City Area Transportation Authority in Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.,
December 8, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
The policy formalizes the goals set by the administration in earlier
executive orders and policy guidances and reiterated in multilateral
forums such as the G7 meeting in France in August and U.N. climate
summit in the fall.
At the U.N. climate talks in Scotland, the Biden administration pledged
with 40 countries and five financial institutions to end new
international finance for unabated fossil fuel energy by the end of
2022, except in limited cases.
"The administration has elevated climate change as a core tenet of its
foreign policy," a State Department spokesperson said on Friday in
response to a request for comment on the cables. The commitment made in
Scotland "will reorient tens of billions of dollars of public finance
and trillions of private finance towards low-carbon priorities, " the
spokesperson said.
Environmental groups said the policy, for which they have long
advocated, is a step in the right direction but creates loopholes that
could undermine its goals.
“This policy is full of exemptions and loopholes that lack clarity, and
could render these restrictions on fossil fuel financing completely
meaningless," said Kate DeAngelis, a climate finance expert at Friends
of the Earth.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Timothy Gardner; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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