New multi-billion-dollar commitments to boost renewables and access to electricity and clean cooking technologies by 2030 have brought the finance and investment pledged through the UN for the energy transition over the trillion-dollar mark, according to a report released on Friday ahead of a UN summit.
The second annual Energy Compact progress report shows an uptick in “Energy Compact” voluntary commitments, to be deployed by 2030, aimed at reducing the ranks of 675 million people living without electricity and over two billion still cooking with polluting fuels, while setting the world on a climate action trajectory towards net-zero emissions by 2050.
The report comes ahead of the UN SDG Summit on September 18-19, aiming to drive action on the Sustainable Development Goals, for which only 15 per cent of the measurable targets are on track.
The goal of clean, affordable energy for all — SDG 7 — has shown progress but not at the pace and scale needed to meet the 2030 deadline.
Meeting this goal is also essential for getting to net-zero emissions by 2050 and limiting warming to 1.5 degrees C above average pre-industrial temperatures, a target considered critical for averting ever-worsening climate disasters.
Achieving SDG 7 and its related climate ambitions would require sharply scaling up ambition towards a clean energy transition, including additional investments of $22-48 trillion in the years to 2030.
The Energy Compacts progress report outlines commitments from governments and the private sector, topping $1.1 trillion, which include planned spending by countries for both domestic and international action to increase energy access, efficiency and renewables, as well as private sector investment slated in these areas.
Expanded commitments over the past year as shown in the new report are building on over $600 billion in finance and investment committed through nearly 200 Energy Compacts made in connection with the UN High-level Dialogue on Energy, a summit held in 2021.
The Energy Compacts have been selected as one of 12 high impact initiatives that the UN development system is mobilizing around for the SDG Summit, to scale up progress by 2030.
They will feature at a high-level event on September 17 during the SDG Action Weekend.
“Each unique Energy Compact is irrefutable evidence of a growing collective will from governments and the private sector to accelerate a just transition that will slow the steady creep of climate change and bring life-changing access to clean, affordable energies. With future generations foremost in our minds, we must now invest in renewable energy that will power the economies of tomorrow,” said Achim Steiner, Administrator of the UN Development Programme and Co-Chair of UN-Energy, the network of 30 UN and international organizations that work on energy issues and support the Energy Compacts.
“This is a clarion call to action, urging governments, the private sector and multi-stakeholder coalitions to go further and faster toward tackling the energy challenges of our time and building the clean energy future we want,” said Damilola Ogunbiyi, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Sustainable Energy for All and also Co-Chair of UN-Energy.
“The UN Secretary-General has called for a Rescue Plan for People and Planet that ends the war on nature and prioritizes policies and investments that will unlock progress across all SDGs. The centrality of a just energy transition to this plan cannot be overstated. The Energy Compacts have an important role to play in building the momentum that we need to deliver a better future for everyone everywhere,” said Li Junhua, UN Under-Secretary-General heading the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, which serves as the secretariat for UN-Energy.
Substantial impacts have been generated by the Energy Compacts since they began in 2021, according to the report.
By providing new and improved electricity connections, Energy Compact proponents have enhanced electricity access for 129 million people, up from 6.2 million people at the one-year mark.
Additionally, 22 million people were provided with access to clean cooking during 2021-2023, a 50 per cent increase from last year’s report.
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