Thursday, November 17, 2016

8 Countries Commit to Increase the Share of EVs in Their Government Fleets

Clean Energy Ministerial logo (Credit: cleanenergyministerial.org) Click to Enlarge.
At the Marrakech Climate Change Conference (COP22), eight nations—Canada, China, France, Japan, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the US—signed a Government Fleet Declaration, pledging to increase the share of electric vehicles in their government fleets and calling for other governments to join them.  The Declaration was developed under the aegis of the Clean Energy Ministerial’s Electric Vehicles Initiative (CEM-EVI).

There is no common quantified target in the Declaration; some of the signatories have their own specific numeric goals, such as China.  The Declaration emphasizes the renewal of government fleets and showcases specific and voluntary commitments of these countries to accelerate the introduction of low-emission vehicles in their vehicle fleets.

Greenhouse gas emissions from the transport sector today account for nearly a quarter of total emissions.  The share will increase significantly in the coming decades unless high-impact actions are taken.  Changing the trajectory of emission in road transportation involves a global shift towards low-emission vehicles, along with the adoption of broader sustainable transportation principles.

The voluntary commitments taken by these countries will reduce fleets’ greenhouse gas emissions and help accelerate the transition to low-emission vehicles, in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

The members of CEM-EVI are cooperating to facilitate the global deployment of 20 million electric vehicles, including plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and fuel cell vehicles, by 2020.

Read more at 8 Countries Commit to Increase the Share of EVs in Their Government Fleets

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