海角大神

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Sweden is moving closer to becoming fossil-fuel free

In its 2016 budget, the聽Swedish government has allocated millions for green-energy infrastructure, at home and abroad.聽Could other countries follow suit?

By Beatrice Gitau , Staff

The Swedish government is taking steps to move the country away from fossil fuels.

In its autumn budget statement, announced in September, the government said it would be spending 4.5 billion kronor (about $545 million) next year on renewable energy and climate-change action.

The government plans to invest in solar cells and "green cars" and to increase environmental taxes.聽Sweden also plans to spend more money in green projects abroad such as creating green infrastructure in developing countries.

Nordic countries already lead the world in renewable energy. Sweden generates around two-thirds of its electricity through renewable sources, according to the Independent. Norway and Iceland rank even higher, even though Norway is also Europe's biggest oil producer.聽

In a speech to the Swedish Parliament in which he announced these green policies, Swedish Prime Minister Stefan L枚fven聽said: "Children should grow up in a toxin-free environment 鈥 the precautionary principle, the removal of dangerous substances and the idea that the polluter should pay are the basis of our politics."

The move comes just a couple of months ahead of the聽United Nations Paris Climate Change Conference, which is aimed at producing a聽global agreement to cut greenhouse-gas emissions.聽

鈥淲ith the investment going into green energy and the no-nonsense position of the government on polluters, Sweden is aiming to set an example to other countries at the upcoming UN conference,鈥 the Independent reports.

鈥2015 is our opportunity, a chance to, in dialogue with all the countries of the world, change course towards a new development path where we can succeed in generating welfare for all, not at the planet鈥檚 cost but in cooperation with it,鈥澛燾ommented聽Johan Rockstr枚m one of the Swedish Prime Minister鈥檚 key advisers, of Sweden's role in Paris.

Sweden is just one of many nations聽around the world that is getting behind renewable energy.

Recently, India, the world鈥檚 third-largest carbon polluter, unveiled a plan that aims to make its economy more energy-efficient and to cut carbon emissions. In this significant shift, the Indian government said that it also intends to produce about 40 percent of its electricity in 2030 from 鈥渘on-fossil-fuel based sources鈥澛爏uch as solar, wind, and hydropower.

Closer home, earlier this year, Hawaii set a goal of generating 100 percent of its electricity from renewable resources no later than 2045. Recently, Costa Rica聽achieved an extraordinary clean energy milestone by running solely on聽renewable energy聽for more than聽75 days, and in the month of July Denmark聽 generated 140 percent of its electricity demand from wind power.