Iran War Should Trigger Faster Exit From Fossil Fuel Dependence: UN Climate Chief

 The disruption to energy markets caused by the Iran war is a lesson on the risks of relying on fossil fuels which should drive governments to wean t



heir economies off oil and gas faster, the U.N. climate secretary told Reuters on Monday.


“If there was ever a moment to accelerate that energy transition, breaking dependencies which have shackled economies, this is the time,” Simon Stiell,


Executive Secretary of the U.N. climate change arm UNFCCC, said in an interview.


Stiell, who will meet EU officials and government ministers in Brussels on Monda


y, said the price spikes triggered by the conflict demonstrated how heavy reliance on imported oil and gas threatened national security and the cost of living.


“Those risks are abundantly clear right now and are burning at everyone’s feet,” he said.


Leaders of the EU, which imports more than 90% of its oil and 80% of its gas, are draft


ng emergency measures to shield consumers from rising energy bills and avoid a repeat of record-high energy prices in 2022 after Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine.


In the longer term, the European Commission says its climate change strategy to re


place fossil fuels with locally-produced renewable and nuclear energy will secure energy security, and cut countries free from volatile fuel prices.


But governments including Italy and Hungary are urging Brussels to weaken its climate policies to provide short-term cost relief for industries.


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Stiell will warn that doing this would be “completely delusional,” according to prepared remarks for an event in Brussels where he will argue the shift to ren


ewable energy means cheaper power and jobs in clean-technology industries.


This year’s U.N. climate negotiations are set to take place in Antalya, Turkey in November. Turkey


said on Friday NATO defenses had intercepted a third missile fired from Iran towards the country.


Stiell told Reuters the UNFCCC was monitoring the security risks, but that “right now, planning continues as announced,” for the COP31 summit.


Rhode Island officials have released a report blasting the Catholic Diocese of Providence for what it calls a “well-worn pattern” of failing to remove dozen


s of priests accused of child sexual abuse and keeping the abuse secret over decades.


“They failed to report the abuse to civil authorities; they failed to properly investigate those c


omplaints internally; and they failed to remove accused priests from positions where they had access to even more children, who tragically paid the pric


e for those failures,” Attorney General Peter F. Neronha commented in releasing the 300-page investigative report that covers 75 years and has been in the works since 2019.



In its response to the report, the Diocese of Providence defended itself and criticized the report as an historical document that fails to acknowledge the changes it has made to protect children. It noted that the report was the result of the diocese’s willingness to cooperate and be transparent.

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