The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Jump in renewable energy jobs worldwide

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ABU DHABI: The renewable energy sector employed 9.8 million people worldwide in 2016, almost twice as many as in 2012, the Abu Dhabi-based Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency said yesterday.

In its ‘Renewable Energy and Jobs – Annual Review 2017, IRENA says the sector employed five million people five years ago.

“Falling costs and enabling policies have steadily driven up investment and employment in renewable energy worldwide since IRENA’s first annual assessment in 2012, when just over five million people were working in the sector,” its director general Adnan Z. Amin said.

“In the last four years, for instance, the number of jobs in the solar and wind sectors combined has more than doubled.”

The review said that last year, the number of people employed in the sector, “excluding large hydropower, reached 8.3 million”.

If large hydropower projects are included, the total number of global renewable-energy jobs climbs to 9.8 million.

According to IRENA, the highest number of renewable energy jobs are in Brazil, China, Germany, India, Japan and the United States. Last year 3.46 million people worked in the sector in China alone, it said, a rise of 3.4 per cent.

It also noted that 62 per cent of sector employees worldwide were in Asia where renewable energy projects were on the rise, especially in Malaysia and Thailand.

The latter, for example, has become a world leader in the manufactur­e of solar photovolta­ic systems.

“We expect that the number of people working in the renewables sector could reach 24 million by 2030, more than offsetting fossilfuel job losses and becoming a major economic driver around the world,” Amin added. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? The renewable energy sector employed 9.8 million people worldwide in 2016, almost twice as many as in 2012, the Abu Dhabi-based Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency said yesterday.
— Reuters photo The renewable energy sector employed 9.8 million people worldwide in 2016, almost twice as many as in 2012, the Abu Dhabi-based Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency said yesterday.

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