U.S. Advances Commitment to Reaching Net Zero Global Emissions and Combatting Climate Change

During Sharm El-Sheikh Visit, Sec. Granholm Launched New International Partnerships, Showcased Innovative Pathways to Accelerating Clean Energy Development and Deployment

This week, U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm traveled to Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt for the 27th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27). The Secretary joined the United States delegation at a critical moment for clean energy and global climate action, launching new partnerships and programs. Over the course of three days, the Secretary participated in a series of bilateral and multilateral meetings with international counterparts along with industry and civil society leaders and, strengthened strategic collaboration, reaffirmed America’s commitment to a just energy transition at home and abroad, and promoted clean energy innovation and deployment to lower costs for consumers around the globe.  

The Secretary kicked off her first day in the U.S. Pavilion  showcasing this year’s achievements from Net Zero World (NZW), the Department of Energy’s (DOE) signature program to accelerate the global transition to net-zero emissions while enhancing economic prosperity  launched last year at COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland. The event highlighted the first in a series of reports that summarizes modeling of partner countries’ energy trajectories and systems, which can help guide government decision makers to make informed climate and energy policy and investment decisions for the transition to a net-zero future. NZW partners include Argentina, Indonesia, Chile, Nigeria, Indonesia, Ukraine, and host country Egypt. Examples of country specific work included Indonesia’s work on island energy transition to enable decarbonization at the scale of thousands of their islands; Chile’s work on coal transition, and market analysis of district heating; and Nigeria’s work on alternative carbon market designs, and carbon capture and sequestration. The Secretary also announced a call for applications for a new Net Zero World women’s leadership program and welcomed two new partners – Singapore and Thailand – who will become the foundation of a new Southeast Asia Net Zero World hub.

To help accelerate a global net-zero future, the Secretary announced  the United States joined Mission Innovation’s Net-Zero Industries Mission, which focuses on developing and demonstrating cost-competitive solutions for decarbonizing hard-to-abate energy intensive industries worldwide by 2030. The Mission complements DOE’s Energy Earthshots (TM) Initiative to target the remaining solution points of the most challenging technical problems across our energy economy ongoing work in clean energy breakthroughs. In September, the Department launched its sixth Energy Earthshot, the Industrial Heat Energy Earthshot. Additional DOE efforts in industrial decarbonization include the opening of a new Industrial Efficiency and Decarbonization Office, the creation of the G7 Industrial Decarbonization Agenda, and joining the Clean Energy Ministerial’s Industrial Deep Decarbonization Initiative.

With hydrogen serving as a versatile fuel for decarbonizing electricity generation and industrial applications, such as in buildings and manufacturing,  DOE, in collaboration with the governments of Japan and the United Kingdom, announced the winners of the H2 Twin Cities 2022 program. Launched by the United States at COP26, the H2 Twin Cities is a global program under the Clean Energy Ministerial’ s Hydrogen Initiative to connect cities and communities around the world to deploy clean hydrogen solutions.  

 The winners of the H2 Twin Cities 2022 are: 

Additional DOE announcements made at COP27 to advance climate and clean energy action include:  

International Announcements 

Source: DOE

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