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G8 agenda and capacity

No energy security without climate security

Outlining a five year plan for G8 countries to secure ‘green’ energy

Authors: ; WWF
Publisher: WWF-World Wide Fund For Nature , 2006

This brief prepared by the WWF for the 2006 G8 meeting in St. Petersburg argues that energy security is interlinked with climate change. The brief argues that “secure energy” should be based on overriding priorities of:

  • reducing carbon emissions and contributing to curbing climate change
  • keeping intact earth's carrying capacity and avoiding impacts on biodiversity, water flows and other natural systems
  • avoiding relying on long and vulnerable lines of supply
  • being supplied from a variety of different sources
  • being based on equitable arrangements that do contribute to social, political or economic stability and predictability.

This WWF brief urges the G8 nations to embark on a serious global ‘climate and energy security plan’ which would aim at dramatically augment energy efficiency measures and renewable energy sources within the next five years. This plan would include:

  • promoting, investing in and regulating for energy efficiency measures
  • continuing to develop and subscribe to the policy and market instruments – such as caps and carbon markets – that promote the switch to low carbon, diversified energy sources
  • creating better opportunities for all new, renewable and clean energy resources by redirecting subsidies from conventional to clean fuels
  • encouraging the uptake of clean and renewable energies by legislating medium- and long term quantitative targets for renewable energies
  • recognising that nuclear energy is one of the most uneconomic energy technologies and that it carries a special class of risks centred on safety, waste disposal and weapons proliferation
  • recognising the value of highly efficient natural gas as a transition fuel to a secure, sustainable, zero carbon energy future
  • regarding carbon capture and storage as having a potential contribution to make ensuring that all coal and gas power plants are zero-emission.