Taken from the Guardian / Photograph: [e]Stringer/Xinhua Press/Corbis
Renewables are finally becoming a globally significant source of power, according to a United Nations Environment Programme report released in March by Frankfurt School UNEP Centre and Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Driven by rapid expansion in developing countries, new installations of carbon-free renewable power plants in 2014 surpassed 100,000 megawatts of capacity for the first time, according to the Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment report. It appears that renewable energy is now entering the market at a scale that is relevant in energy industry terms – and at a price that is competitive with fossil fuels.
The numbers are compelling. Renewables such as wind, solar and biomass generated an estimated 9.1% of the world’s electricity in 2014, up from 8.5% in 2013, according to the report. These sources made up the majority of new power capacity in Europe, and also brought electricity to new markets.
They also caught the eyes of investors: in 2014, energy investment in rose 17% over the previous year, surging to $270bn, according to the report.
Conventional wisdom meets unconventional growth
A change in perspective
The interest in clean energy has spread to every corner of the globe, undermining the long-held assumption that a strong economic future is reliant on fossil fuels, particularly in the developing world. The technology evolution that dropped the cost of solar modules by around 75% between 2009 and 2014 is now being followed by political and financial initiatives that are further driving down costs.
South Africa, Brazil, China and India have developed new policy approaches for auctioning off power concessions. Today, those mechanisms are spreading to Europe. Meanwhile, America’s big banks are bundling thousands of rooftop solar systems into Wall Street-friendly investment opportunities. On the other end of the economic spectrum, crowdsourcing and community financing is also taking hold and driving growth at the grassroots level.
One of the next big steps for government will be removing or redirecting state support for mature and profitable fossil fuels. According to the IEA, fossil fuel subsidies totaled an estimated $550bn in 2013, more than four times those for renewable energy.
If we redirect most of the estimated $36tn that will be invested in energy infrastructure over the coming two decades into clean energy, the transition to a green economy could be realized far more quickly than most imagine today.
Beyond all the numbers, though, there’s also an intangible energy building behind renewables. Simply put, people are inspired by clean energy and realize that it’s an idea whose time has come.
Right now, for example, two pilots are attempting to circumnavigate the Earth in an airplane powered only by the sun. Tackling a feat that not long ago would’ve been considered impossible, they have combined the best solar technology with the most efficient motors and materials to take their plane, the Solar Impulse, on an epic, clean energy voyage.
The clean energy future isn’t just possible and desirable – it’s essential. On a vital, basic level, our decisions and actions will determine whether the Anthropocene will be an age in which human ingenuity and responsibility will allow 10 billion people to have access to modern forms of energy without compromising the vital life support systems of our planet.