Saturday, June 14, 2014

US Carlos Pascual Heads to Columbia, Kosovo & Bank of America Coal Questions in His Wake


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, June 5 -- A week after Carlos Pascual appeared at the UN as US Ambassador for International Energy Affairs, he is leaving the State Department for Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy.
  Back on June 5,  Inner City Press asked Pascual about the Kosovo lignite coal project pending at the World Bank
  Pascual dodged the question, saying there is “no conclusion yet on Kosovo." Will there be on by the Fall, when he starts at Columbia?
  To his June 5 co-panelist Adnan Amin of IRENA, Inner City Press asked of UN Sahel envoy Romano Prodi's proposal that the Sahelian desert should be turned into a solar energy farm. Amin acknowledged there is not enough inter-connectivity or transmission lines, and he said that demand in Europe is not growing.
  In another Sustainable Energy for All press conference earlier on June 5, Inner City Press asked Andris Piebalgs, European Union Commissioner for Development International Energy Affairs, about funding the Grand Inga dam in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- what is the benefit to average Congolese? 
  He spoke of environmental review and compensatory measures. His co-panelist Kandeh Yumkella of #SE4ALL said energy for mines in South Africa is important too.
  Yumkella, like most of the material passed out at the SE4ALL events, promoted Bank of America. But that company is protest for funding mountain-top removal coal mining. What does Ambassador Pascual think of that? What does the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia?  The Free UN Coalition for Access will keep asking. Watch this site.