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		G7 ministers may pledge to phase out coal, decarbonise power -draft
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		 [May 25, 2022]  By 
		Kate Abnett 
 BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Climate ministers from 
		the Group of Seven economic powers will this week consider committing to 
		phase out polluting coal-fuelled energy by 2030 and decarbonise their 
		power sectors by 2035, according to a draft meeting communique seen by 
		Reuters.
 
 The invasion of Ukraine by Russia, a top fossil fuel exporter, has 
		triggered a dash among some countries to buy more non-Russian fossil 
		fuels and burn more coal to cut reliance on Russian gas - raising fears 
		that the energy crisis triggered by the war could undermine efforts to 
		fight climate change.
 
 G7 climate, energy and environment ministers will meet in Berlin from 
		Wednesday to Friday.
 
 There, they will attempt to agree on commitments to ensure their 
		short-term response to soaring global energy prices and fuel supply 
		fears does not derail longer term commitments to slash greenhouse gas 
		emissions heating the planet.
 
 "We commit to phase out domestic unabated coal power generation and 
		non-industrial coal-powered heat generation aiming at the year 2030," a 
		draft of their meeting communique said. "Unabated" refers to power 
		plants that do not use technology to capture their emissions.
 
 
		
		 
		The draft would also commit G7 countries to have a "net zero electricity 
		sector by 2035" and to start reporting publicly next year on how they 
		are delivering on a past G7 commitment to end "inefficient" fossil fuel 
		subsidies by 2025.
 
 The draft could change before it is adopted on Friday. Sources familiar 
		with the discussions said Japan and the United States had both indicated 
		they could not support the coal phase-out date.
 
 An official at Japan's industry ministry, which oversees local power 
		generation infrastructure, declined to comment directly on the G7 
		negotiations.
 
		
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			 Heavy equipment excavate anthracite coal from a strip mine in New 
			Castle, Pennsylvania, U.S., July 13, 2020. Picture taken July 13, 
			2020. REUTERS/Dane Rhys 
            
			 
The official said a proposal to phase out domestic unabated coal power 
generation by 2030 would not be compatible with Japan's domestic policy. Japan 
aims to cut the share of coal in its electricity mix to 19% by 2030, down from 
32% in 2019. 
U.S. officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
 Coal is the highest CO2-emitting fossil fuel, and scientists say global use of 
it needs to plummet if the world is to cut emissions fast enough to avoid the 
worst impacts of climate change.
 
 All G7 countries use coal power, although the share in Germany, Japan and the 
United States is larger than in Canada, France, Italy and Britain.
 
 Germany and Canada have pledged to phase out coal by 2030, while France, Italy 
and Britain plan to do so earlier. The United States and Japan have not set a 
date, although the U.S. government's plan to decarbonise the power grid by 2035 
implies coal plants would either close or use carbon capture technology by that 
date.
 
 Failure to agree the targets among ministers could see them passed to country 
leaders for a possible agreement at a G7 meeting in June.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Abnett; Additional reporting by Yuka Obayashi, Timothy 
Gardner; Editing by Maria Sheahan and Catherine Evans)
 
				 
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