Monday, June 25, 2012

PM: World urgently needs new energy usage paradigm



KUALA LUMPUR: The world urgently needs a new paradigm of development that reflects changing times, namely the huge spike in demand for consumer items that will have an enormous impact on the way the world uses its energy, says Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

He believed natural gas had an important role within the new paradigm, sustaining development at the same time decoupling it from rising emissions.

“We simply can’t afford to allow today’s emerging economies to follow the same ‘Grow First, Clean Later’ model that the early industrialisers adopted.

“It may not be the perfect solution but it is without doubt one of the best we have today, offering the lowest carbon footprint of all the fossil fuels and producing less than half the carbon dioxide of coal,” he said when opening the 25th World Gas Conference themed, ‘Gas Sustaining Global Growth’.

The prime minister said one of the strongest arguments in favour of increasing the use of natural gas was the fact that its environmental benefits would be felt immediately.

On gas prices, Najib said efficient pricing of energy needed to be seen in the broader context of economic reforms and properly sequenced in its implementation.

“This would generate a sufficient buffer of income growth that will in turn enable the population to more easily absorb higher end-use energy prices.

“This in turn will help ensure that price reform is more readily accepted by the wider population,” he said.

Najib also stressed the world was grappling with an economic slowdown in three years for the second time.

Unless more urgent steps are taken to address the systematic weaknesses that act as a barrier to self-sustaining global growth, nations would be mired in a protracted period of economic volatility, he said.

The premier also said the world economy remained sluggish three years after the 2009 financial crisis and the uncertainty continued to hold back demand and deter investment.

“More recent developments remind us that we are not yet out of the woods,” he added. — Bernama

Source: http://www.sabahtoday.com/?p=8983

Photo source: http://www.topnews.com.sg/category/people/najib-tun-razak

5 comments:

Unknown said...

The Sabah state government is promoting and emphasizing 'greener' ways, how about the M'sia government?

Anonymous said...

Sustainable energy use is one of the concerns nowadays.

Anonymous said...

Natural gas is one of the cleaner method in energy generation as it cause the lowest carbon foot prints compared to other methods.

Hinamori said...

Shares of the company, Malaysia’s sole supplier of natural gas to the non-power sector counter, rose 10% to RM2.42 a share by 0156 GMT compared with their reference price of RM2.20, outperforming the benchmark index’s 0.49% rise

Hinamori said...

Gas Malaysia’s upbeat debut also comes in the face of a 54%drop in first quarter profit reported last week, dented by lower margins even as revenue rose 9.2%. Analysts said that the drop was a one-off and that earnings would recover in the coming quarters

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