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| G7 leaders plant trees at Ise Jingu shrine in Kashikojima, Japan. |
The leaders of the UK, US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
Japan and the European Union encouraged all countries to join them in
eliminating “inefficient fossil fuel subsidies” within a decade.
“Given the fact that energy production and use account for
around two-thirds of global greenhouse gas emissions, we recognise the crucial
role that the energy sector has to play in combatting climate change,” said the
leaders’ declaration, issued at the end their summit in Japan. The pledge first
entered into G7 (then known as G8) declarations in 2009 but has until now
lacked a firm timeline.
Shelagh Whitley, a research fellow at the Overseas Development Institute, called it an “historic day” but said 2020 was a more
appropriate date if governments were serious about their commitments to the
global climate deal agreed in Paris in December.
Read The Guardian
story - “G7 nations pledge to end fossil fuel subsidies by 2025.”

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