The Star Malaysia

‘Green power not enough’

More still need to be done to slow down climate change, says IEA

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LONDON: Electricit­y capacity from renewable energy is set to expand by as much as 50% in the next five years, bolstered by government support and falling costs, but more would be needed to slow down warming of the globe, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said.

Those gains represent an increase of about 1,200 gigawatts from 2018 to 2024, equal to the total installed capacity in the US, according to a report published yesterday by the Paris-based institutio­n.

Countries are adding more clean power as a key part of efforts to de-carbonise energy supply, but it’s still not fast enough, said the organisati­on that advises rich nations on energy policy.

“Renewables are already the world’s second largest source of electricit­y,” said Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director.

“But their deployment still needs to accelerate if we are to achieve long-term climate, air quality and energy access goals.”

As countries in China, Europe and the US increase deployment of wind turbines and solar panels, the share of renewables in global power generation will rise to 30% in 2024, up from 26% now, the IEA said.

A majority of those gains, about 60%, will be achieved by solar power. Costs of both utility-scale and distribute­d solar PV generation are expected to decline as much as 35% by 2024. That will help make costs of utility-scale solar plants equal to or cheaper than new fossil fuel plants in some countries.

Distribute­d solar, those panels that are placed on homes, offices and factories is set to boom as costs come down.

Much of the expansion will be at commercial and industrial sites.

Still, about a quarter of the growth will be residentia­l, with about 100 million solar rooftop systems on homes by 2024.

Renewables are also making gains in providing heat to buildings.

Heating and cooling demand from buildings and industry account for roughly half of global energy consumptio­n and is responsibl­e for 40% of global carbon dioxide emissions.

Heat from renewable energy is set to increase by 22% by 2024, according to the IEA, with China, the EU, India and US contributi­ng most of that growth.

Even so, renewables will only support 12% of global heat consumptio­n by 2024 compared with 10% now. In India, even as renewable heat consumptio­n is set to increase, its overall share of heat generation will be flat as fossil fuels are deployed to meet growing demand. — Bloomberg

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