Sign-On to G7 Leaders: Stop Pushing All Fossil Fuels & Invest in the Clean Energy Transition
Ahead of the upcoming G7 Summit (11-13 June, 2021), civil society groups are coming together to pressure G7 countries to end fossil fuel expansion and support for fossil fuels at home and abroad. The International Energy Agency recently confirmed in its May 2021 report what civil society has been saying for decades — the currently planned production and expansion of fossil fuels globally is not compatible with global climate targets. Northern countries must pay their fair share for a global transition and move first and fastest in phasing out fossil fuels, but all countries globally must stop the expansion of fossil fuels to protect health and livelihoods.

Sign-ons are due by the end of MONDAY, 7 JUNE 2021. This letter to leaders of G7 countries — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States — is open to signing by organisations of all sizes and types, including groups from all countries. Please circulate widely to anyone interested in signing on, and contact laurie@priceofoil.org with any questions.

Note: This letter will be delivered to G7 leaders, then shared publicly. Signing authorizes organisers to share this letter and excerpts publicly, including online, in the media, and in advertisements.

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Letter Text
As governments gather for the G7 Summit to discuss how to build a "strong, sustainable, balanced and inclusive recovery," it is critical that G7 governments put “global ambitions on climate change and the reversal of biodiversity loss at the centre” of their plans[1] and stop financing fossil fuels.

We are at a pivotal moment in the climate emergency. The devastating local, regional, and global impacts of climate change are already disproportionately affecting frontline communities, Indigenous people, women, youth, social movements, workers, unions, urban movements, and farmers in the global South. The longer action is delayed, the harder it will be to avoid the worst climate impacts and ensure a just transition for workers, communities, and countries. At the same time, the economic and health impacts of the COVID-19 crisis, combined with the increasing impacts of climate change, have created devastating situations for countries in the global South.

*We Can’t Afford More Fossil Fuels*

The currently planned production and expansion of fossil fuels globally is not compatible with globally agreed climate targets.[2] In its May 2021 report, the International Energy Agency has confirmed that new oil, gas, and coal projects anywhere in the world are not compatible with limiting global warming to 1.5ºC and that governments need to urgently step up their ambition in phasing out existing production.[3] Northern countries must pay their fair share for a global transition and move first and fastest in phasing out fossil fuels.This also means the continued and deliberate proliferation of coal, oil, and gas in Africa, Asia, and Latin America is contrary to scientific evidence that calls for an urgent halt to fossil fuel expansion due to debilitating impacts on the climate, livelihoods, public health and the environment.

*Gas is Dirty, Expensive, and Unnecessary for Development*

G7 governments and other northern countries continue to promote reliance on gas and other fossil fuels in the global South. G7 and other northern government financial institutions are supporting the expansion of gas projects not just at home but overseas with huge sums of public money. Continued investment in fossil fuels, including gas, will lock in emissions and create stranded assets that will particularly burden developing countries into the future. Instead of seeking loopholes to prop up dirty gas development, financial institutions — and the governments that back them — should explicitly end all financing and support for fossil fuels.This would in turn free up significant sums of public money to invest in building back better from the coronavirus and increase support for developing countries.

*A Just Recovery Must Alleviate Debt Burdens*

The COVID-19 crisis has led to instability in oil prices, less investment, and falling government revenues, and as a result global South debt payments have become even more unsustainable, especially in fossil fuel producing countries. These debt payments are mounting at the same time that countries need to expand healthcare and social protections to deal with the effects of the pandemic. G7 governments must pursue debt cancellation to alleviate this burden.

What our governments decide now will set the course for whether we cut global carbon emissions by 2030, stop harming communities with dirty fossil fuel projects, and keep people whole — or fail to protect our planet and communities.

We, the XX undersigned organizations from XX countries, call on the leaders of G7 governments to listen and respond to the voices of global citizens calling for climate justice, an end to fossil fuel extraction, and debt cancellation, and take the following actions:

– Cancel debt payments in global South countries grappling with COVID-19 and climate impacts;
– Stop all fossil fuel finance from bilateral and multilateral funding sources, and encourage other governments to do the same;
– Support mechanisms for countries in the South that will speed up a just transition, and discourage international trade arbitration mechanisms that protect fossil fuel investors;
– Pay their fair share of climate finance to global South countries for climate adaptation , the development of renewable energy technologies, a just transition to clean energy for workers, communities, and countries, and access to energy for those who currently lack it;
– Put an end to fossil fuel development in your own countries, including by ending fossil fuel subsidies; manage the decline of existing production of oil, gas, and coal; and rapidly initiate a just transition to clean and safe renewable sources of energy - involving extensive engagement with oil, gas, and coal workers, their unions and affected communities.

The climate crisis poses the greatest existential threat to our planet and our communities. The IPCC has warned that we must cut global greenhouse gas emissions roughly in half by 2030 to avert the most catastrophic impacts. Continued support for fossil fuels undermines global climate action and puts local communities’ health at risk.

At this critical moment, we demand G7 governments demonstrate meaningful climate leadership and stop fueling the climate crisis with continued support for fossil fuels, including fossil fuel production and consumption in countries of the global South.

Signed,

Africa Coal Network – Africa
Africa Institute for Energy Governance – Africa
Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice – Nigeria
Andy Gheorghiu Consulting – Germany
Arab Watch Coalition — Middle East & North Africa

Asian Peoples' Movement on Debt & Development – Asia
Bretton Woods Project – United Kingdom
Center for Natural Resources Governance – Zimbabwe
Centr za Ekologiju i Energiju – Bosnia & Herzegovina
Coastal Livelihood & Environmental Action Network – Bangladesh

Comité Nacional de Lucha Contra el Cambio Climático – Dominican Republic
Corporate Accountability & Public Participation Africa – Nigeria
Earthlife Africa – South Africa
Environmental Rights Action / Friends of the Earth Nigeria – Nigeria
Fossil Free Sweden – Sweden

FracTracker Alliance – United States
Friends of the Earth Togo – Togo
Friends of the Earth U.S. – United States
Fund Our Future – International
Health of Mother Earth Foundation – Nigeria

Law & Policy of Sustainable Development Research Center – Vietnam
Magyar Természetvédők Szövetsége / Friends of the Earth Hungary – Hungary
Natural Justice: Lawyers for Communities & the Environment – International
Oil Change International – International
Oilwatch Africa – Africa

Peace Point Development Foundation – Nigeria
Powershift Africa – Africa
South Durban Community Environmental Alliance – South Africa
Strategic Youth Network for Development – Ghana
WoMin African Alliance – Africa

Uplift – United Kingdom
350.org Japan – Japan
350.org Latin America – Latin America
350.org Africa – Africa

[more to come]


References:
[1] G7 February Virtual Summit Commitments
[2] 'Production Gap' and 'Sky’s Limit' reports
[3] IEA: Roadmap for the Global Energy Sector
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