The ADB, which provides loans and grants for projects in thepoorest countries in the Asia Pacific region, said its current policy was"no longer adequately aligned with the global consensus on climatechange".
“Coal and other fossil fuels have played a large part inensuring access to energy for the region's economic development, but they havenot solved the energy access challenge, and their use harms the environment andaccelerates climate change,” the Manila-based bank said in the document.
The lender will also no longer fund "any coal mining,oil and natural gas field exploration, drilling or extraction activities",the document said.
However, under certain conditions, it would provide fundsfor natural gas projects and "hybrid electricity solutions" involvingfossil fuels as backup systems, according to the draft.
Between 2009 and 2019 the ADB funnelled 42.5 billion USDinto energy sector projects in Asia, where around 60 percent of electricity isgenerated by coal, its data show.
The final version of the energy policy is expected to besubmitted to the ADB board of directors by October./.