The Guardian (USA)

Green energy could drive Covid-19 recovery with $100tn boost

- Jillian Ambrose

Renewable energy could power an economic recovery from Covid-19 by spurring global GDP gains of almost $100tn (£80tn) between now and 2050, according to a report.

The Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency found that accelerati­ng investment in renewable energy could generate huge economic benefits while helping to tackle the global climate emergency.

The agency’s director general, Francesco La Camera, said the global crisis ignited by the coronaviru­s outbreak exposed “the deep vulnerabil­ities of the current system” and urged government­s to invest in renewable energy to kickstart economic growth and help meet climate targets.

The agency’s landmark report found that accelerati­ng investment in renewable energy would help tackle the climate crisis and would in effect pay for itself.

Investing in renewable energy would deliver global GDP gains of $98tn above a business-as-usual scenario by 2050 by returning between $3 and $8 on every dollar invested.

It would also quadruple the number of jobs in the sector to 42m over the next 30 years, and measurably improve global health and welfare scores, according to the report.

“Government­s are facing a difficult task of bringing the health emergency under control while introducin­g major stimulus and recovery measures,” La Camera said. “By accelerati­ng renewables and making the energy transition an integral part of the wider recovery, government­s can achieve multiple economic and social objectives in the pursuit of a resilient future that leaves nobody behind.”

The report also found that renewable energy could curb the rise in global temperatur­es by helping to reduce the energy industry’s carbon dioxide emissions by 70% by 2050 by replacing fossil fuels.

Renewables could play a greater role in cutting carbon emissions from heavy industry and transport to reach virtually zero emissions by 2050, particular­ly by investing in green hydrogen.

The clean-burning fuel, which can replace the fossil fuel gas in steel and cement making, could be made by using vast amounts of clean electricit­y to split water into hydrogen and oxygen elements.

Andrew Steer, chief executive of the

World Resources Institute, said: “As the world looks to recover from the current health and economic crises, we face a choice: we can pursue a modern, clean, healthy energy system, or we can go back to the old, polluting ways of doing business. We must choose the former.”

The call for a green economic recovery from the coronaviru­s crisis comes after a warning from Dr Fatih Birol, head of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, that government policies must be put in place to avoid an investment hiatus in the energy transition.

“We should not allow today’s crisis to compromise the clean energy transition,” he said. “We have an important window of opportunit­y.”

Ignacio Galán, the chairman and CEO of the Spanish renewables giant Iberdrola, which owns Scottish Power, said the company would continue to invest billions in renewable energy as well as electricit­y networks and batteries to help integrate clean energy in the electricit­y.

“A green recovery is essential as we emerge from the Covid-19 crisis. The world will benefit economical­ly, environmen­tally and socially by focusing on clean energy,” he said. “Aligning economic stimulus and policy packages with climate goals is crucial for a long-term viable and healthy economy.”

 ?? Photograph: Bill Allsopp/Alamy ?? Green energy investment­s could see returns of up to $8 on every dollar spent, according to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency.
Photograph: Bill Allsopp/Alamy Green energy investment­s could see returns of up to $8 on every dollar spent, according to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency.

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