The Asian Age

Renewable energy excel over other forms

In China, two new wind turbines were installed every hour in 2015, meaning the nation had built almost 20,000 new turbines by the end of the year

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Last year was a huge turning point for clean power, with renewable energy surpassing coal to become the largest source of power capacity in the world for the first time, according to a new report. And not only have renewables now overtaken coal, but the rate of their adoption keeps getting faster. In another first, growth in renewables outstrippe­d all other forms of new power generation in 2015, with clean energy accounting for more than half of the world’s new electricit­y capacity added last year. The new figures, released in a market report by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) this week, mean that energy forecasts from only a year ago now need to be revised — with renewables growth between 2015 and 2021 predicted to be 13 per cent greater than estimated last year.

That revised estimate should see renewables be responsibl­e for 28 per cent of electricit­y generation by 2021 – last year, it accounted for 23 per cent, so each year, renewables take over about one per cent of the electricit­y market. That 2021 prediction might only be a little over a quarter of the world’s total electricit­y in five years’ time, but it amounts to a massive 7,600 terawatt hours — equivalent to the total combined electricit­y generation of the US and the European Union (EU) today. And in that five-year timespan, renewables are expected to absorb 60 per cent of all power capacity growth, which basically means the IEA doesn’t see the record-setting gains shown in the past year slowing down any time soon.

“We are witnessing a transforma­tion of global power markets led by renewables and, as is the case with other fields, the centre of gravity for renewable growth is moving to emerging markets,” said IEA executive director Fatih Birol. In those emerging markets, the rate of renewables adoption is almost unimaginab­ly fast. In China, two new wind turbines were installed every hour in 2015, meaning the nation had built almost 20,000 new turbines by the end of the year. That flurry of investment saw China soak up about half of all new wind power additions, and approximat­ely 40 per cent of global renewable capacity increases in total. Wind power led the growth in renewables, adding 66 gigawatt (GW) of capacity in 2015, followed by solar, which represente­d 49 GW. And just in case you think that means solar’s been slacking off, bear this in mind— that additional 49 GW of capacity amounts to about 500,000 new solar panels being installed around the world every day last year. So, obviously there’s a lot to celebrate in these new figures, which the IEA puts down to stronger renewables policies — chiefly in the US, China, India, and Mexico plus falling prices thanks to stronger competitio­n in the marketplac­e, and better technology. But the researcher­s also say we need to make sure the momentum keeps up. Many countries around the world still aren’t getting behind renewables strongly enough, and even in nations that have thrown their support behind clean power — such as China — their increase in renewables capacity still doesn’t meet their ever-higher electricit­y demands. Whereas in the US, EU, and Japan, additional renewables capacity is expected to outpace electricit­y demand over the next five years.

That revised estimate should see renewables be responsibl­e for 28 per cent of electricit­y generation by 2021

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