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Fossil fuels are OK, US Secretary of Energy told Africans

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U.S. Secretary of New Energy Chris Wright spoke at a gathering of energy ministers and tech founders in Washington last Friday and encouraged them to use whatever energy they want, according to a report from the New York Times.

Amidst confusion about changes in U.S. policy, curious about the ways in which 600 million citizens gain nearly powerless citizens – “Including termination” Power AfricaIt, it is a major initiative that has supported them for a decade.

“We have been in the West for many years and shamelessly can't open coal, coal is not good,” Mr Wright said. “It's just nonsense, 100% nonsense. Coal has changed our world and made it better.”

Wright, former CEO of Liberty Energy, said climate change is a “real, physical phenomenon” but doesn't think it's a list of the top 10 problems he faces in the world.

It said his speeches were “received roaring approval” because they were similar to what African energy developers have said over the years.

The Obama initiative will resume or focus given that Trump freezes aid to South Africa, and it is unclear.

But a former official said renewable energy is now the fastest. The cheapest form of energy It can be deployed on the mainland and does not require huge spending on the grid or plants.

read Complete report: The New York Times.

See also:

Carbon capture is more expensive than switching to renewable energy in full: Research

When electric cars are booming

Spend on global energy transition where needed

Energy emissions are set to peak, but are “not timely” to achieve climate goals

Blooming solar energy “touches” its renewable energy targets for 2030

The hottest January ever expanded with stripes violating 1.5c threshold

Floods or droughts: Climate change worsens global floods

Continuous rise in methane emissions worrisome senior scientists

Oil and gas industry net zero track: S&P Global

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard has been an Australian journalist in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne, and then passed SE Asia in the late 1990s. He has been a senior editor in the United States for 17 years.

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