Major
oil exporters are getting bad press for topping the list of per capita
greenhouse gas emissions, but they usually just shrug off the bad rap ©Youssef
Karwashan (AFP)
|
Global oil producers, who
provide the world with much of the fossil fuel that causes global warming, are
in no hurry to brighten up their own image as climate dinosaurs. Some Gulf countries have
timidly started investing in renewable energy, but experts say the initiatives
are just a tiny crack in producers' otherwise solid front of indifference to
climate change.
"So
far exporting countries, especially Gulf countries, have done everything to
make any progress on international climate agreements difficult," said
Patrick Criqui, an energy expert.
Major
oil exporters are getting bad press for topping the list of per capita
greenhouse gas emissions, but they usually just shrug off the bad rap.
AFP report continues:
They
say "don't point the finger at us too much because we produce the
hydrocarbons that are used the world over", observed Francis Perrin,
president of Strategy and Energy Policy publications.
Some
are, however, starting to "smooth the edges," in the face of global mobilization
for the environment, he said.
But
slowly.
FNH,
a foundation run by French environmental activist Nicolas Hulot, said Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates had never put a number on greenhouse gas
reduction targets, and Venezuela, Nigeria and Angola had failed to formulate
any kind of commitment at all. Russia meanwhile has just said it expects its
emissions to remain steady.
"Overall
and unsurprisingly, oil-producing countries make minimal commitments, or none
at all," FNH said.
It
is true that dependence on oil income, which accounts for 96 percent of exports
for Venezuela and 70 percent of government revenue for Nigeria, makes the
search for alternatives a hard sell.
What's
more, half of OPEC's members are developing countries that are finding it hard
to absorb the serious squeeze on their budgets due to sharply lower oil prices,
and don't want to, or can't, shell out on cost-intensive green investment.
Countries
like Algeria, which hopes to cover over a quarter of its energy needs with
renewables within 15 years, demands financial aid from developed countries
before going seriously green.
"For
them, like for all developing countries, the fight against poverty and access
to energy are the priorities and will remain so for a long time," Perrin
said.
But
Gulf countries, still comfortably off despite cutbacks, are starting to look at
alternatives, including nuclear options for Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia, and
gas, which emits far less CO2 than oil.
The
United Arab Emirates are turning to solar energy, with an ambitious sustainable
urban project, Masdar City, and Shams-1, the world's biggest concentrating
solar power centre.
And
Saudi Arabia is the first country in the Middle East to have launched a carbon
capture and stocking scheme.
But
any sense of urgency is undermined by projections suggesting that fossil fuels
including oil will remain king over the next decades.
Fossil
fuels, experts predict, will still cover three quarters of the world's energy
needs 25 years from now.
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