Ƶ will lead the way in green energy tech, vows minister at LEAP

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  • Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman warns that pushing ahead to renewable energy too soon is actually counterproductive in the fight against climate change

RIYADH: Ƶ will lead the way on green initiatives instead of waiting for them to be developed elsewhere, the Kingdom’s energy minister vowed as he hit back against skepticism over the country’s environmental commitments.

Speaking at the LEAP 2022 forum in Riyadh, Abdulaziz bin Salman, talked up his country’s plan to achieve net zero on carbon emissions by 2060.

The prince argued that technological developments could see Ƶ hitting that target ahead of schedule.

He said Ƶ would be using carbon to create a circular economy, and warned that pushing ahead to renewable energy too soon is actually counterproductive in the fight against climate change.

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Speaking at the LEAP 2022 forum in Riyadh, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, minister of energy, talked up his country’s plan to achieve net-zero on carbon emissions by 2060.

Prince Abdulaziz said that many people were questioning the Saudi green initiatives as they did not see how a hydrocarbon country would join an effort to limit hydrocarbons.’

He said “The answer is simple, instead of waiting for solutions to come our way we should be there to develop this solution and get the world into it.”

Discussing measures already taken, Prince Abdulaziz said a million oil barrels are being reused instead of being destroyed, and he pointed to the mega-city of NEOM and other “ambitious giga-projects” as “samples of how engaged we are.”

Prince Abdulaziz spoke of the importance of hiring young people into key industries, “as they have much bigger interests to see it through.”

Referring to developing technologies to help with the transition to a net-zero economy, he said that Ƶ wanted to put together a “global ecosystem” as there is “nothing better than an organized system.”

Prince Abdulaziz also warned against rushing towards renewable dependence before such facilities are fully developed, claiming some countries who had gone down this route are “burning more than they produce.”