The Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF), the global platform of the leading gas producing nations, has urged the international community gathered in Glasgow, UK, for UNFCCC COP26 to look for energy options that achieve the right balance between the post-COVID-19 economic and social requirements and climate actions, particularly for the most vulnerable regions of the world.
Yury Sentyurin, Secretary General of the GECF who led the Forum’s delegation, said: “Given tech-nology’s pivotal role in transforming the energy industry, we recommend that the COP26 negotia-tions are underpinned by technology transfer to decarbonise the energy sector, including the decar-bonisation technologies of the gas industry.”
Gas is the cleanest of all fossil fuels, and its abun-dance, flexibility, and affordability makes it an ideal fuel of choice, particularly for emerging and devel-oping economies, many of them in highly populated regions of Asia and Africa.
Latest GECF figures estimate natural gas to become the most used source of energy in the world by 2050, upping its share from 23% today to 27%. “Ensuring access to competitive and reliable energy sources is of paramount importance for a sustained economic recovery,” noted Sentyurin, whose organisation is an Observer to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the organiser of the Conference of the Parties (COP).
The official also outlined the steps being taken by the GECF Member Countries, from technology and innovation to research and development, in order to cement the role of natural gas as a solution for a balanced energy transition.
“Our Environmental Knowledge and Solutions framework has been ini-tiated as a collaborative platform with designed measures to build capabilities and exchange expertise, specifically regarding greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions mitigation practices.” “The GECF Member Countries have placed climate action at the forefront of their priorities,” he added.
The GECF Member Countries are Algeria, Bolivia, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Iran, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Russia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela, whilst Angola, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Malaysia, Norway, Peru, and the United Arab Emirates are Observer Members. Together, the group represents 70% of the proven gas reserves, 44% of its marketed production, 52% of pipeline, and 51% of LNG exports across the globe. Representing the Russian Federation, H E Alexey Overchuk, Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation cited the energy landscape of the world’s largest country by landmass as an example for other countries.
Responding to this theme of discrimination, H E Ali Sala-jegheh, Vice President and Head of the Department of Envi-ronment of the Islamic Republic of Iran urged for lifting of coercive measures on the western Asian country.
“These coercive measures and sanctions, in explicit contra-vention to global sustainable development agenda and rel-evant multilateral agreements, have consequences beyond our national context, hence, contributing to global warming.”Meanwhile, Qatar, another GECF Member and host of the Headquarters of the GECF, affirmed its National Environment and Climate Change Strategy at COP26.
H E Sheikh Faleh bin Nasser Al Thani, Minister of Environment and Climate Change of the State of Qatar told delegates that Qatar’s strategy for environment and climate change is based on five main pillars: reducing GHG emis-sions and air pollutants, enhancing the abundance of biodiversity, establishing sustainable water management, improving waste management, building a circular economy, and enhancing land use productivity.
Qatar has also promised the first carbon-neutral FIFA World Cup™ next year. The GECF has been an active participant of the Conference of Parties platform, joining COP24, COP25, and COP26. This year, the COP aimed to commit countries to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.