UN pleads for cleaner-energy future for Asia growth engine
At a United Nations forum in Singapore late last month, policymakers were told that Asia needs clean
energy to power sustainable and inclusive economic growth. Balancing sustainable development with high rates of
economic growth requires agreement on a new energy compact for Asia and the Pacific.
“The Asia-Pacific economy is an engine of growth — but to keep it running we need cleaner, more sustainable,
more accessible energy,” said Noeleen Heyzer, United Nations under-secretary-general and executive secretary of
the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
“We need a new Asian energy compact — a game-changer — to ensure universal access to modern energy sources,
reduce dependence on fossil fuels, significantly improve energy efficiency, and more than double the share of
renewables in the Asian energy mix by 2030.”
Her remarks formed part of a lecture titled “Rio+20: Implications for energy access and sustainable development
in Asia,” as part of the Distinguished Speaker Program organized by the Energy Market Authority (EMA),
Singapore.
Global energy demand is predicted to grow by 33 percent between 2010 and 2035 — with 50 percent of that
increase in demand expected from China and India alone. “Asian growth currently depends on fossil fuels for 80
percent of our primary energy supply. With increasingly volatile commodity prices and the negative impacts of
carbon-intensive growth on our environment, we need a transformation of our regional economic systems — and
this must be driven by the energy sector,” said Heyzer.
The year 2012 has been declared by the United Nations General Assembly as the International Year of Sustainable
Energy for All.
The world body will be working with countries in the region to explore the potential for developing an
integrated regional power grid, among other initiatives to address issues of energy security and sustainability
in Asia and the Pacific.
https://www.chinapost.com.tw/business/asia/thailand/2012/05/21/341718/UN-pleads.htm