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Search resuls for: "Malaysia — Malaysia"


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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia has ambitious goals to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 — but the Southeast Asian nation cannot do it alone, said the country's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. "They expect developing countries like Malaysia to do it on our own which is not realistic," Anwar told CNBC's JP Ong at the Energy Asia conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In March, the International Renewable Energy Agency forecast that Malaysia will need to double its renewable energy transition investments to at least $375 billion in order to meet its 2050 net-zero emissions goals. Anwar reaffirmed Malaysia's commitment to these goals, but said partners in developed nations "have to understand that the transition takes time and takes investments" and that they have to "play their part." The energy transition has started, has begun."
Persons: , Anwar Ibrahim, Anwar, CNBC's JP Ong, Malaysia's Organizations: Malaysia —, country's, Energy Asia, International Renewable Energy Agency Locations: KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Malaysia — Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia’s Anwar Ibrahim was sworn in as prime minister on Thursday, capping a three-decade political journey from a protégé of veteran leader Mahathir Mohamad to protest leader, a prisoner convicted of sodomy and opposition leader. His appointment ends five days of unprecedented post-election crisis, but could usher in a new instability with his rival, former Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, challenging him to prove his majority in Parliament. Both men failed to win a majority in a Saturday election, but the constitutional monarch, King Al-Sultan Abdullah, appointed Anwar after speaking to several lawmakers. Anwar, 75, has time and again been denied the premiership despite getting within striking distance over the years: He was deputy prime minister in the 1990s and the official prime minister-in-waiting in 2018. Anwar’s coalition, known as Pakatan Harapan, won the most seats in Saturday’s vote with 82, while Muhyiddin’s Perikatan Nasional bloc won 73.
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