Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Solar investment tops $161B

Renewables led in power-generation capacity added in 2017.

- JEREMY HODGES

Solar investment­s eclipsed all other forms of electricit­y generation in 2017 as China’s green boom accelerate­d.

Investors worldwide plowed a record $161 billion into solar energy last year, more than half the investment in all renewables apart from large hydroelect­ric projects, according to the Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment report, jointly published Thursday by the United Nations and Bloomberg New Energy Finance energy investment and carbon markets firm.

Total investment in renewables rose 2 percent to $280 billion.

In its bid to no longer be seen as the world’s worst polluter, China invested $127 billion in renewable energy last year. More than two-thirds of that was for 53 gigawatts of solar energy, enough capacity to power more than 38 million homes.

Renewables made up a record 61 percent of net power generation capacity added worldwide in 2017. Actual output from clean-energy sources accounted for just 12 percent of electricit­y production, illustrati­ng the gap that needs to be bridged before clean energy can overtake fossil fuels.

“The world added more solar capacity than coal, gas, and nuclear plants combined,” said Nils Stieglitz, president of the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, which contribute­d to the report. “This shows where we are heading, although the fact that renewables altogether are still far from providing the majority of electricit­y means that we still have a long way to go.”

The costs of solar and wind energy have shrunk dramatical­ly in recent years, making the economic case to transition away from carboninte­nsive energy sources all the more compelling. Even though coal and gas are still the cheapest sources of electricit­y, that’s likely to change as soon as 2023, according to the Bloomberg research firm.

China, Australia and Sweden saw the largest increase

in investment, which declined for markets that have historical­ly led the way for renewables. Investment in the United Kingdom fell by 65 percent while Germany’s slipped by more than a third.

Global emissions rose to

a record last year in the first annual increase since 2014.

In 2017, $103 billion was invested in new fossil fuel generators while $42 billion went into new nuclear reactors and $45 billion to large hydro dams, the report said. Renewable-energy investment in the U.S. was $40.5 billion, down 6 percent.

Europe’s share of world investment

in renewable energy fell to 15 percent in 2017, the lowest recorded since the data series began in 2004, while developing economies accounted for a record 63 percent of global investment in 2017, up from 54 percent in 2016.

Renewable energy prevented the emission of 1.8 gigatons of carbon dioxide in 2017, the report said.

 ?? AP ?? An engineer conducts an inspection in November at a solar power plant in Hyogo, Japan. Solar-power investment reached a record in 2017, with China responsibl­e for much of the boom, said a report published Thursday.
AP An engineer conducts an inspection in November at a solar power plant in Hyogo, Japan. Solar-power investment reached a record in 2017, with China responsibl­e for much of the boom, said a report published Thursday.
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