China's climate envoy said that global oil and gas shortages stemming from the US-Iran conflict should compel nations to quicken their transition to clean energy, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.
While some governments have temporarily reverted to coal to counteract immediate fossil fuel deficits, Liu Zhenmin, China's special envoy for climate change, emphasized at a World Economic Forum panel in Dalian that this approach offers only a fleeting fix, the report said.
The report stated that long-term energy security and supply certainty require nations to accelerate their structural shift toward sustainable power.
The envoy suggested that international markets look to China's model, which boasts dominant wind and solar installations, expanding electric vehicle networks, and robust battery storage capacity.
The country simultaneously maintains massive oil reserves and leads in global coal extraction, however.
Liu contrasted Beijing's resilience with the situation in India, where fuel deficits sparked public unrest and forced domestic oil refiners to absorb steep financial losses to prevent consumer price spikes, the report said.
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