Global
investment in new renewable energy capacity this decade – 2010 to 2019
inclusive – is on course to hit US$2.6 trillion, with more gigawatts of solar
power capacity installed than any other generation technology, according to new
figures.
According
to the Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2019 report, released ahead
of the UN Global Climate Action Summit, this investment is set to have roughly
quadrupled renewable energy capacity (excluding large hydro) from 414 GW at the
end of 2009 to 1,650 GW when the decade closes at the end of this year.
(All references to renewable energy in this release exclude large hydro-electric
dams of more than 50MW.)
Solar
power will have drawn half – US$1.3 trillion – of the US$2.6 trillion in
renewable energy investments made over the decade. Solar capacity alone
will have grown from 25 GW at the beginning of 2010 to an expected 638 GW by
the close of 2019 - enough to produce all the electricity needed each year by
about 100 million average homes in the USA. (The USA had about 128 million
households in 2018)
The
global share of electricity generation accounted for by renewables reached 12.9
per cent, in 2018, up from 11.6 per cent in 2017. This avoided an estimated 2
billion tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions last year alone - a substantial
saving given global power sector emissions of 13.7 billion tonnes in
2018.
Including
all generating technologies (fossil and zero-carbon), the decade is set to see
a net 2,366 GW of power capacity installed, with solar accounting for the
largest single share (638 GW), coal second (529 GW), and wind and gas in third
and fourth places (487 GW and 438 GW respectively).
The
cost-competitiveness of renewables has also risen dramatically over the decade.
The levelized cost of electricity (a measure that allows comparison of
different methods of electricity generation on a consistent basis) is down 81
per cent for solar photovoltaics since 2009; that for onshore wind is down 46
per cent.
"Investing
in renewable energy is investing in a sustainable and profitable future, as the
last decade of incredible growth in renewables has shown," said Inger Andersen,
Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme.
"But
we cannot afford to be complacent. Global power sector emissions have risen
about 10 per cent over this period. It is clear that we need to rapidly step up
the pace of the global switch to renewables if we are to meet international
climate and development goals."
2018 sees quarter-trillion dollar mark exceeded
again
The
report, released annually since 2007, also continued its traditional look at
yearly figures, with global investment in renewables capacity hitting US$272.9
billion in 2018.
While
this was 12 per cent down over the previous year, 2018 was the ninth successive
year in which capacity investment exceeded US$200 billion and the fifth
successive year above US$250 billion. It was also was about three times the
global investment in coal and gas-fired generation capacity combined.
The
2018 figure was achieved despite continuing falls in the capital cost of solar
and wind projects, and despite a policy change that hit investment in China in
the second half of the year.
A
record 167 GW of new renewable energy capacity was completed in 2018, up from
160 GW in 2017.
Jon
Moore, Chief Executive of BloombergNEF (BNEF), the research company that
provides the data and analysis for the Global Trends report, commented:
"Sharp falls in the cost of electricity from wind and solar over recent
years have transformed the choice facing policy-makers. These technologies were
always low-carbon and relatively quick to build. Now, in many countries around
the world, either wind or solar is the cheapest option for electricity
generation."
The
report also tracks other, non-capacity investment in renewables - money going
into technology and specialist companies. All of these types of investment
showed increases in 2018. Government and corporate research and development was
up 10 per cent at US$13.1 billion, while equity raised by renewable energy
companies on public markets was 6 per cent higher at US$6 billion, and venture
capital and private equity investment was up 35 per cent at US$2 billion.
Said
Svenja Schulze, Germany's Federal Minister for the Environment, Nature
Conservation and Nuclear Safety: "The technologies to use wind, sun
or geothermal energy are available, they are competitive and clean. Within 10
years Germany will produce two-thirds of its power based on renewables. We are
demonstrating that an industrial country can phase out coal and, at the same
time, nuclear energy without putting its economy at risk. We know that
renewables make sense for the climate and for the economy. Yet we are not
investing nearly enough to decarbonize power production, transport and heat in
time to limit global warming to 2C or ideally 1.5C. If we want to achieve a
safe and sustainable future, we need to do a lot more now in terms of creating
an enabling-regulatory environment and infrastructure that encourage investment
in renewables."
"It
is important to see renewables becoming first choice in many places," said
Nils Stieglitz, President of Frankfurt School of Finance and Management.
"But now we need to think beyond scaling-up renewables. Divesting from
coal is just one issue within the broader field of sustainable finance. Investors
increasingly care whether what they do makes sense in the context of a
low-carbon and sustainable future."
China still leads, but renewables investment spreads
China
has been by far the biggest investor in renewables capacity over this decade,
having committed USD 758 billion between 2010 and the first half of 2019, with
the U.S. second on USD 356 billion and Japan third on USD 202 billion.
Europe
as a whole invested USD 698 billion in renewables capacity over the same
period, with Germany contributing the most at USD 179 billion, and the United
Kingdom USD 122 billion.
While
China remained the largest single investor in 2018 (at USD 88.5 billion, down
38 per cent), renewable energy capacity investment was more spread out across
the globe than ever last year, with 29 countries each investing more than USD 1
billion, up from 25 in 2017 and 21 in 2016.
The
Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment report is commissioned by the UN
Environment Programme in cooperation with Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating
Centre for Climate & Sustainable Energy Finance and produced in
collaboration with BloombergNEF. The report is supported by the German Federal
Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, and Nuclear Safety.
No comments:
Post a Comment