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IEA wants $4.8tr investment to reduce energy pollution

By Roseline Okere
29 June 2016   |   1:27 am
International Energy Administration (IEA) has called on governments across the globe to adopt strategy to cut pollutants by half, a plan that would add about seven per cent to the total energy investment needed through 2040.
IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol

IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol

International Energy Administration (IEA) has called on governments across the globe to adopt strategy to cut pollutants by half, a plan that would add about seven per cent to the total energy investment needed through 2040.

The strategy it added, includes $4.8 trillion for advanced pollution control and accelerating the transformation of the energy industry.The IEA said in a statement yesterday, that each year an estimated 6.5 million deaths were linked to air pollution with the number set to increase significantly in coming decades unless the energy sector takes greater action to curb emissions.

In its first ever in-depth analysis of air quality, the IEA’s World Energy Outlook (WEO) special report released yesterday, highlights the links between energy, air pollution and health.

It identifies contributions the energy sector can make to curb poor air quality, the fourth-largest threat to human health, after high blood pressure, poor diets, and smoking.

The report stated that energy production and use – mostly from unregulated, poorly regulated or inefficient fuel combustion – are the most important man-made sources of key air pollutant emissions: 85 per cent of particulate matter and almost all of the sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides.

It noted that millions of tonnes of these pollutants are released into the atmosphere each year, from factories, power plants, cars, trucks, as well as the 2.7 billion people still relying on polluting stoves and fuels for cooking (mainly wood, charcoal and other biomass).

In the central outlook of the report, growing attention to this issue and an accelerating energy transition post-COP21 puts global emissions of these pollutants on a slowly declining trend to 2040.

However, the problem is far from solved and global changes mask strong regional differences: emissions continue to fall in industrialised countries. In China, recent signs of decline are consolidated.

IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol, sai: “Clean air is a basic human right that most of the world’s population lacks, No country – rich or poor – can claim that the task of tackling air pollution is complete. But governments are far from powerless to act and need to act now. Proven energy policies and technologies can deliver major cuts in air pollution around the world and bring health benefits, provide broader access to energy and improve sustainability.”

The air quality outlook is not set in stone, but rather it is a policy choice. The report presents strategies tailored to various country circumstances to deliver cleaner air for all. A Clean Air Scenario demonstrates how energy policy choices backed by just a seven per cent increase in total energy investment through 2040 produce a sharp improvement in health. Under such a scenario, premature deaths from outdoor air pollution would decline by 1.7 million in 2040 compared with our main scenario, and those from household pollution would fall by 1.6 million annually.

The IEA strategy for cleaner air requires the implementation of a number of proven policies. Actions to deliver access to clean cooking facilities to an additional 1.8 billion people by 2040 are essential to reducing household emissions in developing countries, while emissions controls and fuel switching are crucial in the power sector, as is increasing energy efficiency in industry and emissions standards that are strictly enforced for road transport.

Overall, the extra impetus to the energy transition means that global energy demand is 13 per cent lower in 2040 than otherwise expected and, of the energy that is combusted, three-quarters is subject to advanced pollution controls, compared with only around 45 per cent today.

“We need to revise our approach to energy development so that communities are not forced to sacrifice clean air in return for economic growth,” said Dr Birol. “Implementing the IEA strategy in the Clean Air Scenario can push energy-related pollution levels into a steep decline in all countries. It can also deliver universal access to modern energy, a rapid peak and decline in global greenhouse-gas emissions and lower fossil-fuel import bills in many countries.”

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