Taiwan Taps Filipino Talent For Global Semiconductor Workforce At 2026 Career Day

Taiwan brings semiconductor career opportunities to Manila, connecting Filipino engineers with global industry leaders as demand for skilled talent continues to rise.

When Publicity Stopped Being Proof Of Reputation Strength

Modern reputation management requires more than visibility, as stakeholders now rely on evidence from actions, culture, and engagement rather than curated public communications.

Chef Tatung Sarthou Introduces A Filipino Philosophy Of Living Through The Wisdom Of The Kitchen

Chef Tatung Sarthou introduces KitchiZen, a book that reframes the Filipino kitchen as a space for life lessons on balance, patience, and understanding enough.

From Narrative To Infrastructure: How Reputation Management Evolved In The Last 10 Years

Reputation today is no longer shaped by messaging alone but by systems, actions, and consistency that stakeholders experience and verify across platforms over time.

118 Nations Commit To Triple Renewable Energy By 2030 At COP28

More than 100 countries unite to triple renewable energy capacity and double energy efficiency by 2030 in a historic climate commitment.


118 Nations Commit To Triple Renewable Energy By 2030 At COP28

78
78

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

A total of 118 countries pledged Saturday to triple global renewable energy capacity by 2030 and double the progress in energy efficiency at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

As part of the initiative announced during COP28 in Dubai, the Global Acceleration for Decarbonization initiative was unveiled.

Among the countries that signed the commitment are the UAE, the United States, Brazil, Japan, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Poland, Germany, Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Kenya, the Netherlands, Nigeria and Spain.

But Türkiye, China, India and South Africa have not yet signed.

Tripling global renewable energy capacity means increasing it from the current 3.4 terawatts in 2022 to 11 terawatts by 2030.

The two targets are among five key steps announced by the International Energy Agency for the success of the UN summit.

Additionally, within the initiative, 50 companies representing more than 40 percent of global oil production signed the Oil and Gas Decarbonization Covenant (OGDC).

As part of the initiative, a commitment was made to provide $1 billion in financing for methane emission reduction projects.

COP28 President Ahmed Al Jaber urged more countries to sign the commitment to triple global renewable energy capacity and double the progress in energy efficiency during the meeting where he announced the initiative.

Describing the launch of OGDC as a “great step,” Al Jaber said: “While many national oil companies have adopted net-zero emission targets for the first time for 2050, I know that they and others can do more.”

“The entire sector needs to set stronger targets for achieving a 1.5-degree global temperature increase,” he added.

Head of Policy and Projects of the Global Wind Energy Council, Joyce Lee, said the consensus reflects the belief that tripling global renewable energy capacity by 2030 is the “most effective lever” in the fight against climate change.

Lee underscored the need to combine the increase in renewable energy capacity with the gradual phasing out of fossil fuels.

She said what is crucial now is for countries to urgently translate the target into policy, regulation and investment action. (PNA)