Houston Chronicle Sunday

Solar, wind units concentrat­ed in a handful of countries

- By Nathaniel Bullard Bloomberg

There is a succinct way to describe the developmen­t of the global power sector over the past decade: more of almost everything. More plants under constructi­on; more generation from those plants; more renewables everywhere — but also more coal and gas.

The recently released 2022 Power Transition Trends report by energy research firm BloombergN­EF shows signs of profound change under way in the sector. Wind and solar now make up 11 percent of global power generation.

Of the new powergener­ation capacity added in 2021, solar was 50 percent and wind was 25 percent. At the same time, thanks to economic rebounds from the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, last year also saw an unpreceden­ted spike in coal-fired power generation. It was up 750 terawatt-hours from 2020 — a very big number, in between the annual power consumptio­n of Brazil and Japan, the world’s 6th- and 5th-biggest national electricit­y consumers. The power sector’s carbon dioxide emissions also rose 7 percent yearon-year.

A deeper dive into the report data reveals some other important dynamics at work. The first is that the developmen­t and constructi­on of new power-generation assets is quite concentrat­ed geographic­ally. A small number of markets account for the vast majority of new capacity.

Wind is the most highly concentrat­ed. From 2012 to 2021, the top 10 markets for wind power accounted for 89 percent of all new capacity installed in that time. Solar is only slightly more diffuse, with the top 10 markets in the same period getting 85 percent of all installati­ons. China, the U.S., Japan and India were the biggest solar markets during that time; China, the U.S., India and Germany were the biggest for wind.

And then there is coal. Just two markets — China and India — made up a combined 78 percent of all new coal-fired power generation capacity in the past 10 years.

Another way to look at trends is by the number of countries where assets are being developed at commercial volume (which BloombergN­EF classifies as greater than 1 megawatt of constructi­on in a year).

In 2012, more countries were adding hydroelect­ricity than either solar or wind at commercial scale. Almost 70 countries built hydro in 2012; 55 built solar; and 48 built wind. Ten years on, hydro has shrunk to 47 countries; solar has more than doubled to 112, and wind is more or less the same, now being built in 53 countries.

Market activity for the three fossil fuel-fired technologi­es — oil, natural gas and coal — is shrinking.

In 2012, there were almost 70 countries building oil-fired power, more than 60 adding gas, and 24 building coal.

A decade later, oil-fired power expansion shrank to 30 countries, gas-fired power to 42 and coalfired power to just 15.

Coal is a global climate problem; its expansion is also concentrat­ed in a very few places.

One trend worth noting relates to solar’s total market expansion. While developmen­t of projects is still highly concentrat­ed, solar generation — the power produced by what has already been built — is becoming less so over time.

This is certainly a good thing for solar power and the countries building it. Diversifyi­ng markets, with a wider distributi­on of local benefits such as reduced emissions and a buffer against variable fuel costs.

It is also worth exploring why the number of active wind markets has expanded little since 2012.

One reason is simply a matter of methodolog­y.

A 1 megawatt solar project — the threshold to be included in this BNEF report — has thousands of individual panels but is quite small. A single megawatt can be deployed on a roof, a fallow field or a small island.

Conversely, for wind, there basically is no such thing as a 1 megawatt project using today’s utility-scale turbines. .

As for solar, it just keeps on going: more markets and at greater scale.

This year, solar installati­ons are likely to hit 250 gigawatts and add a quarter to all capacity installed to date.

 ?? Michael Sohn/Associated Press ?? A wind turbine turns behind a solar panel in Feldheim near Treuenbrie­tzen, Germany.
Michael Sohn/Associated Press A wind turbine turns behind a solar panel in Feldheim near Treuenbrie­tzen, Germany.

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