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Asian Nations Pledge Efforts to Save Energy,
Develop New Sources
ATTENTION - ADDS details ///
CEBU, Philippines, Jan 15, 2007 (AFP) - Sixteeen
Asian nations pledged Monday to work together to save energy and
develop new supplies in the face of soaring world oil prices. The
Cebu Declaration on Energy Security was issued at the end of the
East Asia summit, which groups the 10-nation Association of
Southeast Asian Nations with Japan, China, South Korea, India,
Australia and New Zealand. The document signed by leaders
acknowledges that "fossil fuels underpin our economies, and will be
an enduring reality in our lifetime." But it highlights limited
reserves, unstable world oil prices, worsening environmental
problems and an urgent need to counter global warming and climate
change. The declaration stresses the need to strengthen renewable
energy development such as bio fuels and promote open trade and
cooperation in the sector. Biofuels, natural gas, nuclear power for
selected countries, hydro-electricity and renewable energy should
reduce the need for fossil fuels in future, it says. The document
reaffirms the bloc's collective commitment to ensuring energy
security, saying reliable and affordable supplies are essential for
strong and sustainable growth. It calls on nations to "explore
possible modes of strategic fuel stockpiling" including
"multi-country and or regional voluntary and commercial
arrangements." Calls to reduce dependence on oil intensified after
prices surged to historic peaks last year. While prices have dropped
since, their continued volatility -- owing in part to geopolitical
tensions -- remains a threat. China, one of the world's biggest
energy consumers, has widened its search for energy sources,
including venturing as far as Africa. The declaration adds:
"Renewable energy and nuclear power will represent an increasing
share of global supply." kw/sm/lh
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