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Safe City : la Serbie sous l'oeil des vidéos de télésurveillance de Pékin

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 08:08

La Serbie poursuit discrètement le déploiement d'un système de vidéosurveillance basé notamment sur la reconnaissance faciale, avec l'aide et la complicité de Pékin. C'est ce que révèlent des documents confidentiels consultés par Radio Free Europe.

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Can the Asia-Pacific Region Deliver Clean, Affordable Energy by 2030?

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 08:08

An Asian mother is taking care of her baby while cooking with traditional stove. Approximately one billion people in Asia and the Pacific still rely on traditional polluting cooking fuels that lead to poor indoor air quality. Credit: Unsplash/Quang Nguyen Vinh

By Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana
BANGKOK, Thailand, Aug 28 2025 (IPS)

The future of the global energy landscape will be shaped by Asia and the Pacific. Over the past two decades, our region has been the principal driver of global energy demand and emissions. Energy has powered prosperity, lifted millions out of poverty and transformed societies.

This progress, however, has come at a cost: widening inequalities, entrenched fossil fuel dependencies and increasing climate vulnerability – which make achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and climate objectives challenging.

The gaps we must close

What will it truly take for the region to realize the energy transition and achieve SDG 7 – clean, affordable, reliable and modern energy for all – by 2030? The new Regional Trends Report on Energy for Sustainable Development shows that universal access to electricity is within reach. Yet other dimensions of sustainable energy require urgent acceleration.

Clean cooking remains the most pressing challenge. Nearly one billion people in Asia and the Pacific still rely on traditional fuels, exposing households – especially women and children – to dangerous levels of indoor air pollution. Renewable energy is growing, although the pace still falls short of what is needed to meet rising demand and lower emissions at the scale required.

Per capita, Asia and the Pacific’s installed renewable energy capacity remains lower than in other parts of the world. At the same time, energy efficiency continues to be underutilized, leaving untapped potential to reduce consumption, lower energy costs and reduce carbon emissions.

These challenges are compounded by emerging pressures. Securing access to and sustainably developing critical raw materials is essential for advancing energy transitions, while expanded regional power grid connectivity is crucial to improving energy security and keeping electricity affordable.

Rapidly growing sectors, such as data centres, also need to shift toward low-carbon pathways. Meeting these priorities will demand strategic planning, coordinated action and a strong commitment to fairness and equity.

Emerging momentum

The Asia-Pacific region is showing encouraging signs in recent years with many emerging initiatives to draw inspiration from. Subregional initiatives, including the ASEAN Power Grid and the Nepal-India-Bangladesh trilateral power trade, are fostering cross-border electricity exchanges, improving reliability and enabling greater renewable integration.

China and India are at the forefront of renewables, while Pacific countries such as Fiji, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu have set targets for 100 per cent renewable electricity by 2030. Indonesia and the Philippines are expanding geothermal capacity. Grid-scale battery storage in Australia is helping manage renewable fluctuations and strengthen system resilience.

Industries, urban centres and the transport sector are also driving change. Countries are rapidly expanding the adoption of electric vehicles through investment and infrastructure. Japan and Singapore are improving building energy efficiency with strict standards and incentive programmes, and the Republic of Korea is deploying smart grid technologies to optimize usage.

These examples illustrate that innovation, investment and cooperation are creating the conditions for scalable energy progress across the region.

A just transition for all

The energy transition is not only a technological shift, but also a social transformation. For many such as workers in fossil fuel industries, those in energy-poor households and youths entering the job market, the transition will be a lived reality. Reskilling, education and social protection must accompany this shift, while creating decent jobs in the renewable and energy efficiency sectors.

Women are disproportionately affected by energy poverty and remain underrepresented in the energy workforce and decision-making roles. Unlocking women’s full participation in the sector is needed to accelerate innovation and inclusive growth. A just energy transition must be gender-responsive, with policies and investments designed to close gaps in access, employment and leadership.

Turning ambition into action

Three ingredients stand out:

1. Ambition in policy and planning.

    • Countries need bold, integrated policies that align national energy plans with climate commitments, including net-zero targets. This means setting higher renewable energy ambitions, phasing down coal dependency, embedding energy efficiency into every sector, and ensuring policies are just and inclusive.

2. Scaled-up investment.

    • Delivering SDG 7 requires mobilizing trillions in sustainable energy investment. Governments alone cannot bear this burden. De-risking mechanisms, innovative financing and public-private partnerships will be critical to unlock capital flows.

3. Regional cooperation.

    Regional grid integration and cross-border power trade, and shared approaches to the development of critical energy transition minerals and technology standards can create efficiencies and resilience.

The region has shown that transformative change is possible. Just twenty years ago, hundreds of millions lacked access to electricity. Today, universal access is within reach, proving that the seemingly insurmountable gaps in clean cooking, renewable deployment and efficiency can be overcome with decisive political will and bold action.

As Asia-Pacific countries gather in September at the ESCAP Committee on Energy, the message is clear: we must act with urgency, ambition and solidarity, or risk being locked in high-carbon pathways. The decisions made in the coming years will define the region’s energy future well beyond 2030.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Excerpt:

Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana is United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP
Categories: Africa, European Union

Fil info Serbie | Violents heurts avec la police devant la Faculté de Philosophie de Novi Sad

Courrier des Balkans - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 08:00

Depuis l'effondrement mortel de l'auvent de la gare de Novi Sad, le 1er novembre 2024, la Serbie se soulève contre la corruption meurtrière du régime du président Vučić et pour le respect de l'État de droit. Cette exigence de justice menée par les étudiants a gagné tout le pays. Suivez les dernières informations en temps réel et en accès libre.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , ,

Le Danemark convoque un haut diplomate américain au sujet d’opérations d’influence au Groenland

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 07:59

Au moins trois personnes liées à l'administration de Donald Trump mèneraient des opérations d'influence secrètes au Groenland, selon les rapports du média danois DR.

The post Le Danemark convoque un haut diplomate américain au sujet d’opérations d’influence au Groenland appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Berlin envisage un service militaire volontaire sur le modèle suédois 

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 07:33

Selon le nouveau plan, à partir de 2026, tous les hommes atteignant l'âge de 18 ans seront enregistrés et devront remplir un questionnaire. En 2028, les personnes sélectionnées seront appelées sous les drapeaux.

The post Berlin envisage un service militaire volontaire sur le modèle suédois  appeared first on Euractiv FR.

L’Allemagne crée un conseil national de sécurité, une première historique

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 07:01

Selon le chancelier allemand Friedrich Merz, les menaces que la Russie et d’autres pays font peser sur la sécurité de l’Europe exigent une plus grande souplesse dans la prise de décision et les réponses.

The post L’Allemagne crée un conseil national de sécurité, une première historique appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Security guarantees for Ukraine take shape

Euractiv.com - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 06:59
In today's edition: France tilts toward China, Costa tours the capitals, Germany's National Security Council, Parliament curbs lobby access

Giorgia Meloni se félicite de l’influence de l’Italie sur les garanties de sécurité pour l’Ukraine

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 06:40

Lors d'une allocution à Rimini, Giorgia Meloni a revendiqué le mérite d'avoir organisé des discussions sur les garanties de sécurité pour l'Ukraine et a critiqué les actions d'Israël à Gaza.

The post Giorgia Meloni se félicite de l’influence de l’Italie sur les garanties de sécurité pour l’Ukraine appeared first on Euractiv FR.

En Belgique, le gouvernement reste divisé sur la reconnaissance de l’État palestinien

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 06:20

De retour de leur pause estivale, les ministres du gouvernement belge, réunis mercredi 27 août, ont cherché à s’accorder sur une position concernant la reconnaissance de l’État palestinien. Un sujet qui divise la coalition de cinq partis depuis des semaines.

The post En Belgique, le gouvernement reste divisé sur la reconnaissance de l’État palestinien appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Europe’s hidden arsenal: Why the Western Balkans matter more than we think

Euractiv.com - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 06:00
Bringing the Western Balkans fully into the EU is not just about completing a political project. It’s about strengthening the Union’s capacity to defend itself, to act with autonomy, and to project stability

A pregnant woman's diary of escape from war zone: 'I prayed the baby wouldn't come'

BBC Africa - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 01:35
Gun-wielding drivers, extortion and breakdowns, as couple flee new front line in Sudan's conflict.

A pregnant woman's diary of escape from war zone: 'I prayed the baby wouldn't come'

BBC Africa - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 01:35
Gun-wielding drivers, extortion and breakdowns, as couple flee new front line in Sudan's conflict.
Categories: Africa, European Union

Mi történik, ha ismét bukik a kormány? Íme a lehetséges forgatókónyvek

ESZTER - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 21:23

François Bayrou miniszterelnök bejelentette, hogy szeptember 8-án bizalmi szavazást kér maga ellen. A szavazásnak két lehetséges kimenetele van. A kormány ----> tovább olvasok!

The post Mi történik, ha ismét bukik a kormány? Íme a lehetséges forgatókónyvek appeared first on FRANCIA POLITIKA.

Categories: Middle East

Fil info Serbie | Rassemblement devant le 5e Lycée de Belgrade

Courrier des Balkans - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 20:50

Depuis l'effondrement mortel de l'auvent de la gare de Novi Sad, le 1er novembre 2024, la Serbie se soulève contre la corruption meurtrière du régime du président Vučić et pour le respect de l'État de droit. Cette exigence de justice menée par les étudiants a gagné tout le pays. Suivez les dernières informations en temps réel et en accès libre.

- Le fil de l'Info / , , , , ,

France warms to more Chinese investment amid tariff fights

Euractiv.com - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 18:42
"We can’t keep playing by the old rules in a world where trade has become an instrument of power," said the French trade minister

Ireland’s dementia care system is under strain as bed numbers shrink

Euractiv.com - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 18:38
Irish deputy says forward-planning is missing, there’s a reduction of bed capacity, and the number of people with dementia will double by 2050

L’ancien commissaire européen Thierry Breton invité à défendre le DSA à la Chambre des représentants américaine

Euractiv.fr - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 17:04

Une commission de la Chambre des représentants américaine a invité l’ancien commissaire européen à témoigner lors d’une audition visant à examiner la règlementation numérique européenne, perçue aux États-Unis comme une menace pour la liberté d’expression et l’innovation.

The post L’ancien commissaire européen Thierry Breton invité à défendre le DSA à la Chambre des représentants américaine appeared first on Euractiv FR.

‘Time for EU to act’ on Gaza, says EU humanitarian chief

Euractiv.com - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 16:56
EU foreign ministers will meet in Denmark this week and discuss a proposal to suspend funding to Israeli start-ups

Polls show more than half of French want Bayrou out, Macron to resign

Euractiv.com - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 16:47
Bayrou had banked on a summer-long communication campaign to convince citizens to push lawmakers towards a budget compromise

Intensified Legal, Political, and Grassroots Battles Over Amazon Oil Expansion

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Wed, 08/27/2025 - 16:42

A report ‘Oil and Gas Expansion in the Colombian Amazon: Navigating Risks, Economics, and Pathways to a Sustainable Future, warns oil and gas projects threaten over 483,000 km² of Colombian Amazon forest, home to more than 70 indigenous groups, and risk becoming stranded assets as global fossil fuel demand declines.

By Umar Manzoor Shah
BOGOTÁ and SRINAGAR, India, Aug 27 2025 (IPS)

A report has warned about the risks of expanding oil and gas exploration in the Colombian Amazon, which may undermine environmental goals, Indigenous rights, and long-term economic stability, unless the government pivots toward sustainable development pathways.

The study, “Oil and Gas Expansion in the Colombian Amazon: Navigating Risks, Economics, and Pathways to a Sustainable Future”, lays out the stakes for one of the planet’s most biodiverse and climate-critical regions.

Colombia’s Amazon region, covering nearly one-third of the country, is not only a biodiversity hotspot but also home to hundreds of indigenous communities and vast carbon-storing forests. Yet beneath its soils lie oil and gas reserves that the government and industry see as potential drivers of energy security and economic growth.

According to the report released by Earth Insight, the International Institute of Sustainable Development (IISD), and the National Organisation of Indigenous Peoples of the Colombian Amazon (OPIAC), some political leaders in recent years have signalled openness to further exploration and production in the Amazon, despite its public commitments to environmental protection and the global push to decarbonise.

“The Colombian Amazon is at a crossroads. The decisions taken in the next few years will either lock in a path of fossil fuel dependency and ecosystem degradation or open the door to a sustainable, diversified economy,” reads the report.

Oil and gas operations in the Amazon, the report warns, could trigger cascading ecological consequences. Roads and seismic lines fragment forests; drilling operations risk oil spills; and increased human access often accelerates deforestation and wildlife loss. “Infrastructure associated with oil and gas projects tends to create long-lasting environmental footprints that extend far beyond the drilling sites themselves,” the authors claim.

The Amazon is already under stress from illegal mining, logging, and agricultural expansion. Adding industrial petroleum activity could push ecosystems toward tipping points, including irreversible shifts in forest cover and carbon balance.

Ignacio Arroniz Velasco, Senior Associate for Nature & Climate Diplomacy at Earth Insight, told IPS news that the Amazon is an integrated ecosystem. As of 2022, according to The Amazonia 80×2025 Initiative, preserving 80 percent of the Amazon by 2025 was still possible with urgent measures to safeguard the 74 percent (629 million hectares) of the Amazon that are Intact Key Priority Areas (33 percent) and with Low Degradation (41 percent); and restoring 6 percent (54 million hectares) of land with high degradation is vital to stop the current trend.

“Although still under threat from industrial expansion, ca. 80 percent of the Colombian Amazon is preserved; however, unless other Amazon countries do the same, the whole ecosystem could collapse. This would mean a shortage of food supplies, medicine (stable forest), and water (water productivity and headwaters). As well as the regulation of floods (aquatic systems) and areas with the highest carbon stock for climate stability,” Velasco told IPS.

Proponents argue that oil and gas projects could generate royalties, jobs, and infrastructure for remote areas. But the report questions whether these benefits outweigh the long-term costs. “Global demand for fossil fuels is projected to decline as the world accelerates toward net-zero emissions. New investments in oil and gas risk becoming stranded assets before they recoup their costs,” it warns.

According to Pablo Jamioy from OPIAC, enforcing environmental protections in the Colombian Amazon in the face of armed groups and illegal economies is a major challenge that cannot be addressed solely through repressive measures, as these tend to increase local tensions and negatively affect communities, especially indigenous peoples.

“The reality is that without first guaranteeing basic conditions for well-being—such as security, access to health services, education, and legal economic opportunities—and without strengthening local governance, particularly the leadership and territorial rights of indigenous peoples, any attempt at environmental control is likely to generate conflict and resistance.”

Jamioy told IPS that from a realistic perspective, a comprehensive, long-term strategy is needed that combines effective state presence with inclusive policies that respect and empower Amazonian communities. “Only in this way can illegal economies be discouraged and the influence of armed actors reduced without exacerbating social tensions,” he said, adding that in this sense, environmental protection necessarily involves strengthening local capacities, recognising the importance of indigenous knowledge systems in conservation, and promoting sustainable development models that link the care of nature with real improvements in living conditions in the region.

The authors stress that the volatility of oil prices and the finite nature of reserves make heavy dependence on fossil fuels a risky economic bet for Colombia. They also point out that historically, resource extraction in remote regions has delivered limited lasting benefits for local communities.

Beyond economics, the expansion raises deep concerns for indigenous peoples, who have constitutionally protected rights to their lands and resources. The report documents cases where extractive projects proceeded without adequate consultation, undermining the principle of consulta previa (prior consultation) required by Colombian law and International Labour Organization Convention 169. “Indigenous territories, when respected and supported, are among the most effective barriers to deforestation. Disregarding their rights for short-term gains would be both unjust and environmentally counterproductive,” the report notes.

Communities fear that oil and gas activity will disrupt traditional livelihoods, pollute rivers, and erode cultural heritage. Many have voiced opposition, warning that once exploration begins, social and environmental change becomes difficult to reverse.

Colombia has pledged to achieve net-zero deforestation by 2030 and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions under its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) to the Paris Agreement. Yet the licensing of new oil and gas blocks in the Amazon appears at odds with these goals.

Velasco said that Colombia has not issued new exploration licences under the current government. It has also lowered its deforestation rate to record low levels, although this latter trend was recently reversed. “Both achievements place Colombia at the very top of the world’s climate and environmental leaders. However, millions of hectares of the Colombian Amazon are still threatened by oil and gas blocks that have not been licensed to investors yet. These “available” blocks would allow future Colombian governments to undo all the hard-earned progress and issue new fossil fuel licenses in the Amazon.”

According to Velasco, to avoid this economic, social and ecological risk in the Amazon, the current Colombian government could choose to permanently remove the unlicensed blocks from its official records. He said that the report suggests different pathways to achieve this, such as via new national legislation, administrative acts grounded on Colombia’s international commitments, expanding natural protected areas or legally recognising more Indigenous territories.

The report identifies governance gaps, including insufficient enforcement of environmental safeguards, lack of transparent data on exploration plans, and inadequate inter-agency coordination. “Without coherent policy alignment, Colombia risks pursuing mutually incompatible objectives — expanding fossil fuel extraction while professing climate leadership,” the authors write.

The report goes beyond merely calling for a halt to oil and gas expansion by presenting concrete alternatives such as expanding renewable energy in non-Amazonian regions, investing in sustainable forest economies, and directing state resources toward rural development that aligns with conservation goals. Key recommendations include strengthening land tenure for indigenous and rural communities to improve forest stewardship, redirecting subsidies from fossil fuels to clean energy and low-impact livelihoods, enhancing environmental monitoring with community participation, and ensuring that all projects in indigenous territories prioritize free, prior, and informed consent.

Pablo Jamioy from OPIAC told IPS News that one of the fundamental mechanisms for strengthening free, prior, and informed consent in indigenous territories in Colombia is to guarantee the legal formalisation of territories requested for collective titling, as well as ancestral territories that have been subject to protection and recovery strategies from Amazonian indigenous peoples. These territories, according to Jamioy, must be recognised under special conservation categories and be subject to their own environmental governance systems. “In addition, it is necessary to implement and ensure the recognition and effective exercise of indigenous environmental authorities, in accordance with Decree 1275 of 2024, which recognises their environmental competencies to consolidate their own systems of administration and use of the territory based on ancestral knowledge.”

He added that it is essential to implement Decree 488 of 2025, “Which establishes the necessary fiscal regulations and others related to the functioning of indigenous territories and their coordination with other territorial entities,” a key regulation for the implementation of Indigenous Territorial Entities. “This decree strengthens their autonomy, both in the management of their systems of government and in dialogue with external actors for the implementation of public policies and the guarantee of the fundamental and collective rights of indigenous peoples.”

Colombia’s Amazon protection efforts receive significant funding from international donors, including Norway, Germany, and the United Kingdom, as well as multilateral initiatives like the Amazon Fund. The report urges these partners to condition future support on clear progress toward phasing out high-risk extractive activities in sensitive ecosystems. “International finance can catalyse progress, but it must be coupled with genuine political will and local participation to be effective,” the briefing states.

Industry representatives contend that modern drilling technologies can minimise environmental harm and that oil and gas revenues are essential for national development. They also argue that Colombia cannot yet afford to forgo these resources given fiscal pressures.

Environmental advocates counter that the country’s long-term prosperity depends on avoiding the boom-and-bust cycles of extractive industries and capitalising instead on its unparalleled natural capital.

The report has predicted that the coming years will see heightened legal, political, and grassroots battles over new oil and gas blocks in the Amazon.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, European Union

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