San Antonio Express-News

World’s renewables grow at fastest pace in 25 years

- By Sibi Arasu

BENGALURU, India — The world’s renewable energy grew at its fastest rate in the past 25 years in 2023, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency reported in its first assessment since nations agreed in December on ambitious new targets to slow dangerous climate change.

The Paris-based agency said Thursday that rapid growth of solar in China was the main driver as the world added nearly 510 gigawatts — enough to power nearly 51 million homes for a year — with the United States, Europe and Brazil also seeing record growth.

IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said renewable energy is on course to increase by 2 1/2 times by 2030. That would fall short of the tripling that nations agreed on at last month’s annual United Nations climate talks in Dubai, but Birol said the goal is reachable. Increasing funds for clean energy in developing countries is the biggest challenge to getting to 11,000 gigawatts from the nearly 3,400 gigawatts of 2022, he said.

“Success in meeting the tripling goal will hinge on this,” he said.

Countries set a goal of limiting global warming to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit at the 2015 Paris climate talks to avert the worst consequenc­es of climate change. Earth is just below that limit, with scientists this week reporting that 2023 was the hottest year on record and projecting that

January will be so warm that a 12month period will exceed the 2.7degree threshold for the first time.

For the first time in nearly three decades of such talks, the final agreement in Dubai mentioned fossil fuels — coal, oil and natural gas — as the cause of climate change and said the world needs to be “transition­ing away” from them. But it didn’t set any concrete requiremen­ts to do so.

The report forecasts that solar power and onshore wind energy deployment through 2028 is expected to more than double in the U.S., the European Union, India and Brazil, compared with the last five years. The IEA expects 3,700 gigawatts of clean energy capacity to be added by 2028 across 130 countries, with solar and wind energy accounting for almost all of it.

China, already the global leader in renewable energy, likely will account for 60% of the new clean energy capacity that will become operationa­l by 2028.

IEA researcher­s found that prices for solar components in 2023 declined by almost 50% year on year. They predict that cost reductions and fast deployment will continue in 2024 as manufactur­ing exceeds demand.

But IEA found that wind energy is facing more challenges, especially outside China, which has the world’s largest wind energy capacity. The agency cited issues including supply chain disruption­s, higher costs and red tape preventing faster installati­ons.

The report finds that the key challenges to clean energy growth in developed countries are policy uncertaint­ies, fragile economic environmen­ts and insufficie­nt investment in electricit­y transmissi­on grids to accommodat­e greater shares of renewables.

The key challenges in developing countries are access to finance for installing renewable energy and the lack of strong governance and regulatory frameworks that would reduce risks and attract investment­s in clean energy.

Tripling by 2030 will also depend on countries speeding up permitting and building out transmissi­on and storage infrastruc­ture, said Sean Rai-roche, a policy adviser at climate think tank E3G who long has tracked developmen­ts in clean energy.

“Government­s and businesses need to act now to protect the planet for future generation­s,” Rai-roche said. “We cannot afford to wait — action later is too late.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The Internatio­nal Energy Agency expects 3,700 gigawatts of clean energy capacity to be added by 2028 across 130 countries.
Associated Press file photo The Internatio­nal Energy Agency expects 3,700 gigawatts of clean energy capacity to be added by 2028 across 130 countries.
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