Oil Change International Response to IEA Sustainable Recovery Report

June 18, 2020By Oil Change InternationalEnergy Transitions & Futures, Press Releases 1 Comment

In response to the new report released today by the International Energy Agency (IEA), experts at Oil Change International have issued the following statement: “The IEA again misses the mark where it matters the most, completely ignoring the link between sustainable recovery and staying within 1.5°C of warming. Nowhere in the report is there mention of the critical 1.5-degree warming limit, let alone analysis of what’s needed for a recovery plan to be fully aligned with it.”

Sortie de crise: L’Agence internationale de l’Énergie Ă©choue de nouveau Ă  planifier la nĂ©cessaire sortie des Ă©nergies fossiles

June 18, 2020By Oil Change InternationalEnergy Transitions & Futures, Press Releases

L’AIE publie aujourd’hui une édition spéciale de son rapport World Energy Outlook dédié aux mesures de soutien aux énergies propres dans le contexte des plans de relance post-COVID. Et pourtant, loin de marquer une rupture avec les modèles préexistants, le rapport s’obstine à ménage toutes les formes d’énergie et fait l’impasse sur la nécessaire sortie des hydrocarbures.

Oil Change International et Reclaim Finance dénoncent cet énième rapport inepte pour guider les choix des décideurs politiques et financiers en matière de transition énergétique et appellent ces derniers à la plus grande prudence quant à ses conclusions.

Export Development Canada’s new climate targets miss the mark

June 9, 2020By Alex DoukasBlog Post

Export Development Canada (EDC), Canada’s government-backed export credit agency, has long been one of the worst in the world when it comes to backing the fossil fuel industry with public money. Their new climate policy opens the door for meaningful change, but the initial targets are far too weak to get the job done.

More and more businesses call for a post-COVID-19 just recovery plan

June 2, 2020By Andy RowellBlog Post

More and more companies do not want to go back. They want a just transition moving forward. We have to make sure now that politicians meet rising corporate and political pressure. There can be no Big polluter bailout. Any post-COVID-19 economic recovery plan has to make central a managed transition away from fossil fuels to a cleaner, more sustainable, more just, future.