The Turkish government and the International Renewable Energy Agency have called for a stronger global push to run vehicles, industry and buildings on electricity rather than fossil fuels, ahead of this year's COP31 climate talks.COP31 President Murat Kurum told the Copenhagen Climate Ministerial on Wednesday that governments should be "decarbonising the way we generate electricity, but also expanding electrification into every sphere of life"."We must make the technologies of the future accessible at scale - and we must ensure that no one is left behind," he told the gathering of climate diplomats and ministers from around 40 countries in the Danish capital.Kurum said that the percentage of final energy consumption which is met by electricity - the key metric of electrification, which is currently around 20% globally - should be increased "as much as we possibly can".The head of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), Francesco La Camera, also addressed the Copenhagen gathering. While his comments to ministers were not public, IRENA released a statement ahead of the talks calling for a goal to increase electricity's share of final energy consumption to 35% by 2035.