The Manila Times

China leading in solar power adoption

- AFP

PARIS: A Chinese boom in solar panel installati­on last year helped drive global investment in renewable clean energy technology to record levels, a new study showed on Tuesday.

After a dip in 2016, overall global investment in the sector rose 3.0 percent to a total $333.5 billion, offsetting falls in Japan, Germany, and Britain, according to the Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) study.

That was the second best annual showing to date after $360.3 billion in 2015.

“The 2017 total is all the more remarkable when you consider that capital costs for the leading technology - solar - continue to fall sharply,” said BNEF Chief Execu

Solar investment came in at $160.8 billion in 2017, a rise of 18 percent despite per megawatt capital costs falling by around a quarter, with China accounting for around half the overall total at $86.5 billion - up 24 percent, the study said.

“China installed about 20 GW [gigawatts] more solar capacity in 2017 than we forecast,” said Justin region, as the Chinese notably - tovoltaic expressway.

Investment in wind power slipped back 12 percent last year, however, to $107.2 billion after a strong rise in 2016.

Solar and wind power remain far out in front in terms of renew- able energy forms ahead of the likes of biomass, geothermal, and small scale hydroelect­ricity, which each attracted less than $5 billion last year.

Well behind China, the United States landed investment­s of $56.9 billion - a rise even so of 1.0 percent despite an unfavorabl­e political climate with President Donald Trump sceptical of climate change and withdrawin­g his country from the Paris climate agreement.

The study highlighte­d what it termed Washington’s “less friendly tone toward renewables.”

A handful of countries saw investment­s more than double, including Sweden to $4 billion and Australia to $9 billion.

Egypt saw a 495 percent increase to $2.6 billion while investment in the United Arab Emirates enjoyed a dizzying 23- fold rise to $ 2.2 billion.

Europe saw a notable decline in renewables investment to $57.4 billion, the fall-off hitting 26 percent in Germany and 56 percent for the United Kingdom on energy policy changes

Japan saw a 16 percent drop, while India was down 20 percent to $11 billion.

BNEF estimated last year saw a record 160 GW of renewable power installed, not counting hydroelect­ricity, comprising 98 GW of solar and 56 GW of wind power.

Energy-smart technology, such as smart meters and energy storage, is also making headway, BNEF noted.

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