Business Climate Development

Global phase-out of leaded fuel is a milestone for multilateralism

Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary-General
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By Joyce Mukucha

The United Nations (UN) Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres on Monday communicated that the global phase-out of leaded fuel represents a milestone for multilateralism, marking the end of a 20-year campaign to eliminate a major threat to the health of people and the planet.

The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) spearheaded the initiative to put the brakes on a century of leaded petrol use and the move is expected to net the global economy $2.45 trillion in savings.

Expressing his gratitude to various governments for their cooperation, Guterres said the phasing out of leaded fuels plays a crucial role in the attainment of quality health and wealth.

“Lead in fuel has run out of gas, thanks to the cooperation of governments in developing nations, thousands of businesses, and millions of ordinary people.

“Ending the use of leaded petrol will prevent more than one million premature deaths each year from heart disease, strokes, and cancer. It will protect children whose IQs are damaged by exposure to lead,” he said.

He said the international success story was an example of what countries can accomplish when they work together for the common good.

“I call for this same commitment to be directed to ending the “triple crises” of climate disruption, biodiversity loss, and pollution. I appeal for Governments to shift away from fossil fuels, such as coal, to renewable sources, and to reform the energy, food, transport, and financial sectors to work with nature, not against it.

“To succeed, we need international cooperation. Compromise. Solidarity. All guided by science,” he said.

The Secretary-General said it was imperative to focus all nations’ efforts on making peace with nature and building a cleaner, greener future for all.

This was seconded by Inger Andersen, the UNEP Executive Director as she said, “Overcoming a century of deaths and illnesses that affected hundreds of millions and degraded the environment worldwide, we are invigorated to change humanity’s trajectory for the better through an accelerated transition to clean vehicles and electric mobility.”

According to UN News, the world officially said goodbye to leaded petrol in July, when service stations in Algeria stopped offering it to drivers.

Vehicles have been running on leaded fuel since 1922 when the compound tetraethyllead was added to gasoline to boost engine performance.

By the 1970s, almost all petrol produced worldwide contained lead, UNEP said.

The health impacts have been catastrophic, as the Secretary-General pointed out, but the environment has suffered too, with air and soil contamination just two examples.

Most high-income nations had prohibited leaded petrol use by the 1980s, but almost all low and middle-income countries were still using it as late as 2002.

That same year, UNEP began the Partnership for Clean Fuels and Vehicles (PCFV), the public-private alliance behind the campaign.

The initiative brought together all stakeholders, and its activities included raising awareness and overcoming resistance from local oil dealers and producers of lead, as well as investing in refinery upgrades and providing technical assistance.

After a 20-year campaign, the use of leaded petrol or gasoline has ended worldwide, including in Chad.

Pertaining challenges to progress, UN News highlighted that UNEP noted that the growth in vehicle use globally contributes to air, water, and soil pollution, as well as the climate crisis.

It has been also highlighted by UNEP that greenhouse gas emissions from the transport sector will rise from nearly a quarter to one-third by 2050.

Although many countries are transitioning to electric cars, with 1.2 billion new vehicles hitting the road in the coming decades, many nations, particularly in the developing world, are still dependent on fossil fuels, UN News alluded.

UNEP said millions of poor-quality used vehicles, imported to countries from Europe, the United States, and Japan, are adding to global warming and air pollution, and are also bound to cause accidents.

Commenting on the inspiration for a greener future, Andersen pointed out that an UN-backed alliance of governments, businesses, and civil society was able to successfully rid the world of this toxic fuel is a testament to the power of multilateralism to move the world towards sustainability and a cleaner, greener future.

“We urge these same stakeholders to take inspiration from this enormous achievement to ensure that now that we have cleaner fuels, we also adopt cleaner vehicles standards globally – the combination of cleaner fuels and vehicles can reduce emissions by more than 80 percent.”

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Byron Adonis Mutingwende