Delhi/Hyderabad, Sept. 9 (Hydnow): India on Saturday announced the launch of the Global Biofuel Alliance and urged G20 nations to join the initiative with a plea to take ethanol blending with petrol globally to 20 percent.
Speaking at the G20 Summit session on ‘One Earth’, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also proposed launching the ‘G20 Satellite Mission for Environment and Climate Observation’ and urged leaders to commence work on the ‘Green Credit Initiative’.
“Today, the need of the hour is that all countries should work together in the field of fuel blending. Our proposal is to take an initiative at a global level to take ethanol blending in petrol up to 20 percent,” he said.
“Or alternatively, we could work on developing another blending mix for the greater global good, one that ensures a stable energy supply while also contributing to climate security,” Modi said at the session attended by US President Joe Biden, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak among others.
The prime minister said energy transition is a significant need of the 21st-century world considering the challenge of climate change.
He said trillions of dollars are required for an inclusive energy transition and that developed countries play a very crucial role in this.
“Along with India, all the countries of the Global South are pleased that developed countries have taken a positive initiative this year, in 2023. Developed countries have expressed their willingness to fulfill their commitment of USD 100 billion for climate finance for the first time,” he said.
At the Copenhagen UN climate talks in 2009, developed countries committed to providing USD 100 billion per year by 2020 to support developing countries in combating climate change.
However, the wealthier nations failed repeatedly to fulfill this commitment.
The Global Biofuels Alliance, which the world’s third biggest oil consumer wants to push during its G20 presidency, mirrors the International Solar Alliance (ISA) piloted by New Delhi and Paris in 2015 to bring clean and affordable solar energy within the reach of all.
“Biofuels are also important from the perspective of a circular economy. Markets, trade, technology, and policy all aspects of international cooperation are crucial in creating such opportunities,” Modi had said.
Biofuel is a renewable source of energy which is derived from biomass. India, which imports over 85 percent of its crude oil needs, is gradually building capacity to produce fuel from such items as crop stubble, plant waste, and municipal solid waste.
While India is on schedule to double the mixing of ethanol extracted from sugarcane and agriculture waste to 20 percent with petrol by 2025, it is also setting up dozens of compressed biogas (CBG) plants.
The Global Biofuels Alliance is aimed at facilitating cooperation and intensifying the use of sustainable biofuels across sectors, including transportation.
Its focus is primarily on strengthening markets, facilitating global biofuel trade, developing concrete policy lesson-sharing, and providing technical support for national biofuel programs worldwide.
Such an initiative is also aimed at helping India’s transition to alternative fuels and cutting its import bill, as it seeks to achieve its net zero carbon emissions goal by 2070.
On the other hand, the ISA aims to mobilize more than USD 1,000 billion of investment needed by 2030 for the massive deployment of solar energy.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that global sustainable biofuel production would need to triple by 2030 to put the world’s energy system on track towards net zero emissions by 2050. (Hydnow)
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