Sun. Nov 24th, 2024

Senior officials from the 21 member economies of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC), which together make up nearly 60 percent of
global energy demand, have agreed to push forward the use of renewable
energy.

The agreement came during their meeting in Bali,
Indonesia on October 1 with the aim to cut at least 45 percent of
regional energy use intensity (EUI) by 2035, a measure of a nation’s
energy efficiency. EUI is calculated as unit of energy demand per unit
of gross domestic product.

In the 2011 Summit in the US,
APEC leaders consented to sharing information, composing joint studies
and transferring technology so as to develop renewable energy.

A joint report by the Asia-Pacific Energy Research Centre and the
APEC Energy Working Group indicated that the region is likely to achieve
the goal but it needs to exert more efforts to ensure the
environmentally-sustainable development of energy.

According
to the report, regional energy demand will soar to 225 percent by 2035
if the EUI is not cut. A projected 80 percent of this will derive from
fossil fuels, meaning that the emission of carbon dioxide will grow by
46 percent.

The ongoing meeting will last until October 3. A
set of recommendations at the event will be submitted to the APEC
Economic Leaders’ Meeting slated for October 7-8 for consideration.

The forum’s member economies account for roughly half of the world’s economic output.-VNA

By vivian