Natural gas is widely considered the
bridge to take us from fossil fuel dependence to a clean energy future –
but that bridge may be a lot shorter than anyone could have predicted.
The International Energy Agency
(IEA) predicts power generation from renewable sources will exceed
natural gas and be twice the contribution from nuclear energy globally
by 2016 – just three short years from now.
IEA’s second-annual Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report (MTRMR) forecasts renewable generation will grow 40% in the next five years despite difficult economic conditions.
Wind And Solar Power The Renewables Charge
Renewable energy
is now the fastest-growing sector of the global power market, and will
represent 25% of all energy generation worldwide by 2018, up from 20% in
2011. In addition, renewable electricity generation
is expected to reach 6,850 terawatt-hours (TWh) and total installed
renewable capacity should hit 2,350 gigawatts (GW), both by 2018.
Wind and solar
photovoltaic generation is powering this jump, and non-hydro renewable
power will double from 4% of gross generation in 2011 to 8% in 2018. IEA
cites two main drivers for their incredible outlook: accelerating
investment and deployment, and growing cost competitiveness versus
fossil fuels.
Strongest Growth In Developing Countries
Even though government funding has been inconsistent, private investment
has remained strong, especially in developing economies. Rural
electrification, energy poverty, and rising demand have been major
challenges for policymakers in these countries, and renewables have
become an increasingly attractive option for diverse and non-polluting
power.
Non-developed countries, led by China,
are expected to contribute two-thirds of all renewable market growth
between now and 2018, compensating for slower growth and market
volatility acorss Europe and the US.
Indeed,
non-hydro renewable power will make up 11% of gross generation in these
countries by 2018, up from 7% in 2012. By itself, China will account for 310GW, or 40% of all global renewable power capacity increases over this time period.
Falling Costs, Rising Capacity
Solving energy poverty issues without harmful emissions is key to renewables growth,
but the larger reason for IEA’s outlook is more likely falling costs.
The report finds renewables now cost-competitive with fossil fuels
across many countries and a wide set of circumstances.
IEA
notes wind is competitive with new fossil fuel in multiple markets,
including Brazil, South Africa, Mexico, and New Zealand, and solar is
competitive both in markets with high peak prices and decentralized
power needs. “As their costs continue to fall, renewable power sources
are increasingly standing on their own merits versus new fossil-fuel
generation,” said Maria van der Hoeven of IEA.
IEA – Policy Uncertainty Is Public Enemy #1
However,
the IEA warns renewables still face a challenging future. Global
investment fell in 2012, and policy uncertainties loom over clean energy
technology in several important markets. In addition, grid integration challenges have materialized in some regions as renewables penetration has hit new levels.
“Policy uncertainty is public enemy number one,” said Van der Hoeven.
“Many renewables no longer require high economic incentives, but they
do still need long-term policies that provide a predictable and reliable
market and regulatory framework.”http://theenergycollective.com/silviomarcacci/242601/iea-renewables-will-exceed-natural-gas-and-nuclear-2016
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