Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
EU Earth

EU Prepares To Push For 'Global Phase-Out' of Fossil Fuels at COP28, Draft Document Shows (euronews.com) 207

A proposal to phase out CO2-emitting fossil fuels at COP27 last won backing from more than 80 countries but oil and gas-rich nations opposed it. European Union countries are preparing to push for a global deal on phasing out fossil fuels at the COP28 climate summit, a draft of the EU's negotiating position has shown. From a report: Diplomats from the bloc's 27 member states are drafting their position for the summit in Dubai in November, where nearly 200 countries will try to strengthen efforts to rein in climate change. "The shift towards a climate neutral economy will require the global phase-out of [unabated] fossil fuels and a peak in their consumption already in the near term," a draft of the EU's negotiating stance, seen by Reuters, says.

Countries have never agreed in UN climate negotiations to gradually stop burning all CO2-emitting fossil fuels, despite this being the main cause of climate change. "Unabated" refers to fossil fuels burned without using technologies to capture the resulting CO2 emissions. The word was in brackets in the draft EU text, indicating that countries have not yet agreed on whether to include it. EU diplomats hope a deal can be made at COP28 - but expect to meet resistance from economies reliant on income from selling oil and gas.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

EU Prepares To Push For 'Global Phase-Out' of Fossil Fuels at COP28, Draft Document Shows

Comments Filter:
  • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @12:19PM (#63822400)

    If countries stop buying oil, the drilling stops.

    The problem will be nations that are both producers and consumers of vast volumes of oil, and controlling them will require force - economic or military.

    Good luck with that.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      "The problem will be nations that are both producers and consumers of vast volumes of oil, and controlling them will require force - economic or military."

      That won't be the only problem.

      "If countries stop buying oil, the drilling stops."

      If countries stop buying oil, the price of oil drops. Capitalism doesn't solve the problem, it ensures the problem won't be solved.

      But sure, let's let free markets and willing cooperation solve it without agreements because those would require physical force.

    • by Chas ( 5144 )

      "Just stop buying oil"

      Not that simple.
      Things like petroleum-based fuel are just ONE piece of the puzzle.
      Fertilizer, plastics, and all sorts of things that support our civilization are byproducts of petroleum extraction.
      Complete cessation would crash the economy and destroy set our civilization back decades if not centuries.

      • "Just stop buying oil"

        Not that simple. Things like petroleum-based fuel are just ONE piece of the puzzle. Fertilizer, plastics, and all sorts of things that support our civilization are byproducts of petroleum extraction.

        Let me say this louder. Plastics are not the problem.

        Burning fossil fuels is the problem, not making plastic.

        Got it now?

        Complete cessation would crash the economy and destroy set our civilization back decades if not centuries.

        Nobody thinks we could do complete cessation of all fossil fuel use instantly. But, you know what would happen if we did? The price of oil would drop and there would be plenty of oil to make plastics with.

      • Things like petroleum-based fuel are just ONE piece of the puzzle.
        Fertilizer, plastics, and all sorts of things that support our civilization are byproducts of petroleum extraction.
        Complete cessation would crash the economy and destroy set our civilization back decades if not centuries.

        Good thing that nobody talks about completely banning plastics and fertilizers.

  • A 65 year old political leader, Sign a unreasonable international commitment, not get any blowback from the IMF or UN. It takes 15 years until another unreasonable international commitment will float to the top. Hope the new superpower is coal centered and it is just forgotten.

    Worse case, you are long term in office Merkel , and you will get to about 5 years away from a goal date and sign another commitment 15 years out. Your friends in the media have no long term historical memory so you wil
  • And the other countries will just burn more of it. 80 countries signed on? That leaves 120 countries that dont give a rats ass about the issue and theyre gonna drill baby drill and burn baby burn.

    We’ve decided to just follow our biology and consume every resource we can get our opposable thumbs on. We’re gonna burn every liter of oil, cubic meter of gas and kilogram of coal that we can pull out of the ground, in addition to consuming every watt of wind, solar and nuclear we can generate. And
  • by OneOfMany07 ( 4921667 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @01:18PM (#63822588)

    There is a reason we've liked what we use. Heck, ignoring the pulling it from the ground part wouldn't change a thing if we could help it.

    Portable (liquid at STP), high energy (carbon hydrogen covalent bonds hold more energy than hydrogen hydrogen covalent bonds do), can burn completely (turns into gases when reacted), etc. I'm sure there are more.

    You don't get to exclude a piece just because you don't like 1 aspect of it. Create a replacement first, or you're fighting a stupid battle. You're fighting against something without another solution. When has that worked before? Did it work in the "war on drugs"?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by quantaman ( 517394 )

      There is a reason we've liked what we use. Heck, ignoring the pulling it from the ground part wouldn't change a thing if we could help it.

      Portable (liquid at STP), high energy (carbon hydrogen covalent bonds hold more energy than hydrogen hydrogen covalent bonds do), can burn completely (turns into gases when reacted), etc. I'm sure there are more.

      You don't get to exclude a piece just because you don't like 1 aspect of it. Create a replacement first, or you're fighting a stupid battle. You're fighting against something without another solution.

      A replacement for what? Hydrocarbons as vehicle fuel? We have it for cars (EVs). Ships and planes are trickier, but in theory we could use synthetic fuels or simply recapture the amount of carbon they emit.

      And for power generation? There's already lots of non-fossil fuel ways of generating power.

      What else? Coal for steel making? Again, alternatives are there, they're just more expensive.

      When has that worked before? Did it work in the "war on drugs"?

      That's a... really bad metaphor.

  • Oh, this is going to go over like a lead balloon. Can't wait to say I told you so.

  • If the EU actually goes forward with this plan ... will they stop buying overseas LPG, and a lot of that comes from Big Bad Polluting America, to heat their Euro homes in the winter?

    Piece of advice to the EU: If you want to understand the importance of a stable electric grid just look at The Great Freeze In Texas in 2021. People actually died from that event.

    Reminder to EU politicians: When your voters die because of your failed policies ... there is no way that sorrow can be spun into a WIN by any talking

    • If the EU actually goes forward with this plan ... will they stop buying overseas LPG, and a lot of that comes from Big Bad Polluting America, to heat their Euro homes in the winter?

      Yes they will. It's not a long-term solution.

    • Piece of advice to the EU: If you want to understand the importance of a stable electric grid just look at The Great Freeze In Texas in 2021. People actually died from that event.

      You do understand that the failure of the electric grid in Texas was because Texas deliberately didn't connect their electric grid to the rest of the US because they didn't want to be regulated, right?

  • 1 - Put the target date far enough in the future that countries can ignore it for a few years before being in danger of not meeting the commitment
    2 - Carve out exceptions to entice reluctant partners
    3 - Make sure that failure to comply has no meaningful penalties. No teeth please.

  • Seriously, getting politicians to agree to do something AND THEN DO IT, is not going to happen. There is really only 1 way to accomplish this:
    Put a slowly increasing tax on consumed goods/services based on where the WORST part/sub-service comes from. This will encourage decisions by governments, utilities and other businesses to take stock of a tax that will increase based on parts/sub-service and do something about it.
    This is simple to design and apply:
    1) use moving satellites ( not geostationary ) to
  • This is Europe realizing it has nothing to burn underground anymore. No more monetary incentives to keep digging, so action can happen...

    North sea oil is in decline, coal is in decline, gas too. Renewables is what we need to keep going long term. And nukes, but lets not kid ourselves, Germans will put a wrench in that. Latest I hear the anti-nuke German green party had been influenced by the KGB. That would be so funny if proven true. (and would explain a lot)

    Just a few days ago: https://news.slashdot.org/s [slashdot.org]

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      There's a lot of shale reserves in Europe. It's just that it's a pretty crappy shale (something like 5 layers in most places, compared to 10-13 in most of US if memory serves me right). And it's politically very difficult, which isn't helped by the fact that some of the best places to extract are under large cities. One of the best extraction points is literally under Louvre itself. Good luck getting drilling permits there.

      So EU scoured the planet for LNG and oil to replace Russian piped gas and oil. Which

  • by bubblyceiling ( 7940768 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @06:53PM (#63823620)
    Good. We have started making progress towards de-linking energy from fossil fuels. Solar is quickly starting to become a viable alternate. This should only help speed things up

"There is no statute of limitations on stupidity." -- Randomly produced by a computer program called Markov3.

Working...