Locally-Controlled, Renewable Energy Championed as Key to Climate Justice

Published on Friday, December 05, 2014 by Common Dreams
Wind turbines, Vendsyssel, Denmark. Photo by Tomasz Sienicki  (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-1.0, GFDL or CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Wind turbines, Vendsyssel, Denmark. Photo by Tomasz Sienicki (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-1.0, GFDL or CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons


As progress at the UN climate summit in Lima, Peru has been reported as “slow” by many observers so far, green campaigners on Friday called on world governments participating in the talks to end their continued dependence on outdated fossil fuel- and nuclear-powered energy systems and urged investment and policies geared toward building clean, sustainable, community-based energy solutions.

“We urgently need to decrease our energy consumption and push for a just transition to community-controlled renewable energy if we are to avoid devastating climate change,”  said Susann Scherbarth, climate justice and energy campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe. “We must stop subsidizing fossil fuels and put this money towards community-based energy solutions.”

Backed by a new white paper by researchers at the What’s Next Forum, Scherbarth and her colleagues at FOEI say that locally implemented and decentralized energy systems—including small-scale wind farms and distributive solar arrays that can feed-in to local power grids—are the key to pulling people out of poverty while also addressing the glaring crisis of runaway greenhouse gas emissions that are ruining the planet and the climate.

“We urgently need a transition to clean energy in developing countries and one of the best incentives is globally funded feed-in tariffs for renewable energy,” said Godwin Ojo, executive director of Friends of the Earth Nigeria.

Solar panels at Druk White Lotus School, India.  Photo by By Daverodgers [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Solar panels at Druk White Lotus School, India.
Photo by By Daverodgers [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

With rights activists across the world putting an emphasis on the idea of climate justice, Ojo put forth that Africans are not interesting in the fossil fuel industry’s promises that more oil, coal and natural gas projects are the answer to the continent’s energy needs or economic woes. Instead, he said, “Africans are pointing to real solutions to stop global warming and for environmental justice.”

 

Among other policies, Ojo and his colleagues at Friends of the Earth have endorsed a proposal presented by African nations (pdf) earlier this year which called for an energy transformation focused on renewable sources, local control, and sustainable financing.

According to Sven Teske, a senior energy expert with Greenpeace, the debate that any nation must choose between economic prosperity and cleaner forms of energy should now be over.

“What’s giving this conference and the energy transition an added boost is that the costs of wind and solar energy have fallen considerably over the past few years,” Teske wrote in a blog post as the talks began earlier this week. “In many countries renewable power plants are now cheaper and produce energy at a lower cost that fossil power plants. Nuclear energy is losing its allure as it proves to be expensive, dangerous and unsustainable.”

Reporting last month from the New York Times showed that the overall costs of “providing electricity from wind and solar power plants has plummeted over the last five years, so much so that in some markets renewable generation is now cheaper than coal or natural gas.”

And according to the Renewables 2014 Global Status Report (pdf), published in November, “Global installed capacity and production from all renewable technologies have increased substantially; costs for most technologies have decreased significantly; and supporting policies have continued to spread throughout the world.”

For Teske, such trends shows renewable energy can now “replace the large coal-fired power plants that are the main carbon dioxide emitters” and should allow governments to “feel more comfortable about taking on the tough emissions commitments that are required to combat climate change.”

Training students to inspect solar panels, DAE, Mexico City. Photo by Talento Tec [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Training students to inspect solar panels, DAE, Mexico City. Photo by Talento Tec [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

As the What’s Next Forum report —titled Global Renewable Energy Support Programme—emphasizes, distributive and decentralized renewable energy systems have several key features which should make them attractive to less-developed and wealthier nations alike. According to the paper’s introduction:

It is not a single answer, silver-bullet solution to all our problems, but [feed-in tariff policies] could, if implemented well, have a considerable impact at several different levels.

•It could provide access to affordable, clean electricity to all the 1,3 billion people currently lacking any access and the more than double who have a bare minimum. It could help promote a new, modern decentralised energy model where people everywhere – rural and urban – become more closely connected to energy production, and societies everywhere rid themselves of the dependence on large, centralised and dirty fossil fuels.

•It could help societies in both North and South to effectively tackle climate change by accelerating the transition to renewable energy. Countries in the global North can get inspired and challenge themselves to re-direct their current energy systems (and lessen consumption). Countries in the global South, supported by countries in the global North, can immediately embark on ambitious trajectories towards 100 per cent renewable community oriented energy, thereby avoiding massive amounts of future emissions.

•It could help rebuild trust between North and South, by providing an example of a truly collaborative scheme with Southern countries at the driving seat. If initiated successfully, it could spur interest in similarly bold, visionary public investment approaches in other sectors.

“Solutions to the climate and energy crisis exist,” explained Niclas Hällström, director of the What Next Forum. “Among the most innovative ones is a mechanism to deliver international climate finance to Southern communities through feed-in tariffs. These are subsidies that cover the difference between actual costs and affordable, clean energy for people. It is a way to promote decentralised, community controlled energy and is the most effective and visionary approach to tackling the urgent need for transformation to renewable energy.”

“We believe it is possible and indeed crucial to transform our energy system to one which ensures access for everyone to sufficient energy to meet their basic needs for well-being and lives with dignity,” said Dipti Bhatnagar, Climate Justice and Energy Coordinator of Friends of the Earth International.

“We need an energy system which supports a safe climate, clean air and water, biodiversity protection, and healthy, thriving local societies that provide safe, decent and secure jobs and livelihoods,” she said.

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