US Carlos
Pascual Heads
to Columbia,
Kosovo &
BofA Qs in
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.
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