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Rockefeller Foundation Launches Scheme to Close Coal Plants in Emerging Markets

The Rockefeller Foundation is launching a Coal to Clean Credit Initiative to help close coal-fired power plants in developing countries.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | The Rockefeller Foundation is launching a Coal to Clean Credit Initiative (CCCI), with which it will aim to support 60 projects by 2030 to help close coal-fired power plants in developing countries.

The Rockefeller Foundation said on Wednesday that as part of the new initiative’s first efforts, it will collaborate with ACEN Corporation, GenZero, Keppel, and Mitsubishi on a pilot project in the Philippines.

The Rockefeller Foundation, established by John D. Rockefeller in 1913, announced in 2020 that it had decided to divest from fossil fuels and not make any new investments in the industry.

The Rockefeller Foundation has already launched programs to lower the use of coal-fired power in Asia and speed up the deployment of battery storage for renewable energy.

Today, the Rockefeller Foundation announced that its new analysis shows that supporting 60 projects by 2030 to close coal-fired capacity could unlock $110 billion in public and private investment. This would prevent 9,900 early deaths and 640,000 lost workdays annually and generate 29,000 new permanent jobs.

“As more and more developing countries and communities choose to transition to clean energy sources, philanthropy has a unique role to play — we can take risks where others cannot and catalyze the momentum needed,” said Ashvin Dayal, Senior Vice President, Power and Climate at The Rockefeller Foundation.

“The projects announced this week will do just that, offering real benefits for people living and working in these communities.”

Despite efforts from organizations like the Rockefeller Foundation, coal use in Asia, especially in top coal importers China and India, isn’t diminishing. On the contrary, it has been growing as the major developing markets in Asia are boosting their coal-fired power generation to meet surging electricity demand.

Despite continued retirements of coal-fired power in the U.S., lower coal demand in Europe, and the end of the 142-year coal electricity in the UK, global coal demand hit another record high last year. And consumption is set to remain at these high levels—or even hit new all-time highs—for a few more years.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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