Putting Renewable Energy Growth into Perspective
Fossil fuels have generated roughly two-thirds of the world’s electricity for the past three and a half decades.
Despite
the expansion of nuclear power in the 1980s and recent year-after-year
of “historic” growth in renewable energy, increasing supplies of
low-carbon electricity have barely kept pace with the growth in global
demand for electricity. As a result, the share of the global electricity
mix provided by coal, gas, and oil has been remarkably constant over
that time.
Fossil fuels provided about 70 percent of global
electricity in 1980, 62 percent in 1990, 64 percent in 2000 and 65
percent in 2010. In 2013, Roger Pielke Jr., a professor of political science at the University of Colorado and author of The Climate Fix, dubbed this lack of progress towards a lower-carbon electricity mix “the Clean Energy Stagnation.” But has the great Clean Energy Stagnation finally come to an end?
Renewable energy now growing at 100 gigawatts per year
The world added 103 gigawatts (GW) of renewable power capacity in 2014, according to a new report
from the UN Environment Program (UNEP) and Bloomberg New Energy Finance
(BNEF). That figure excludes large hydropower projects (but includes
small hydro less than 50 megawatts in capacity) and is dominated by wind
and solar, which saw growth of 49 GW and 46GW, respectively, both
record-setting figures.
More importantly, the share of renewable
electricity (excluding large hydropower) in the global electricity mix
ticked upwards from 8.5 percent in 2013 to 9.1 percent in 2014. The
combined share of wind, solar, biomass and waste-to-power, geothermal,
small hydro and marine power is now nearly on par with the 10.5 percent
of global electricity supplied by nuclear power.
The growth of
renewables was enough to push fossil energy’s share of the mix down by
1.2 percentage points, according to data compiled by Jessica Lovering,
a senior energy analyst at the Breakthrough Institute, from
International Energy Agency (IEA) and UNEP/BNEF reports. That follows a 2
percent decline in fossil energy’s share from 2012 to 2013.
Is
this a sign that renewable energy is finally growing fast enough to not
only help meet growing global demand but also push down fossil fuels’
market share?
Perhaps.
Two years is a short trend. For
renewables to truly compete with fossil fuels in a fight for global
market share, wind, solar, biomass and other renewable energy sources
will have to continue to expand at least 2.3 percent per year. That’s
the compound annual rate of growth in global electricity demand forecast
by the IEA’s latest central scenario (which, I might add, already bakes
in some pretty ambitious energy efficiency goals).
To drive actual consumption of fossil fuels (and not just fossil electricity’s share
of a growing global market) downwards, renewables would need to
increase their annual output (in terawatt-hours) faster than the demand
for electricity is growing.
How fast will renewable energy grow?
Getting
into the prognostication game is a dangerous business of course.
Instead of making my best guess forecast for renewable energy growth,
I’ll instead give you two forecasts that are almost certainly wrong—but
serve to bracket the realm of most likely outcomes. Consider two future scenarios for global electricity supplies out to the year 2040.
In
one future, renewable energy sources excluding large hydro continue to
grow in absolute terms at the roughly 100 GW (or 183 terawatt-hours) per
year rate achieved in 2014. This would imply linear growth in renewable
energy capacity, and would mean that renewables would continue with
strong percentage annual growth for the next few years, but see the
growth rate decline over time.
In
another future, global non-hydro renewable electricity generation
continues expanding at a compound annual growth rate of nearly 10
percent per year. That would imply a doubling of generation roughly
every 7 years.
In both scenarios, I’ll assume global electricity demand grows 80 percent by 2040, as per the IEA’s latest core scenario. And I use hydropower and nuclear power expansion forecasts from the IEA as well (hydro expands 35 percent and nuclear capacity grows 60 percent globally through 2040, after replacing retiring existing plants).
As
I said, both of these scenarios are likely to be completely inaccurate
forecasts. In reality, emerging technologies tend to follow an S-curve of adoption,
starting out at rapid compound annual growth rates, leading to
descritions of the "meteoric" or "exponential" rise of this or that
technology. But these rates eventually slow as the industry reaches maturity,
then begin to look more like linear growth with steadily declining
relative growth rates. (Indeed, the IEA assumes fairly linear growth for
hydropower and nuclear, which I adopt here for these scenarios).
S-curve Adoption Rates for Consumer Products in the United States, 1900-2005
It’s
unlikely the global renewable energy industry will stop growing in
scale and stay stuck at the 100 GW per year level for the foreseeable
future. Then again, you just can’t keep up exponential growth forever.
100
GW of new non-hydro renewables was enough to increase annual generation
from these sources by nearly 10 percent in 2014, but it would take 286
GW—or almost 3 times as much annual installed capacity—to sustain a 10
percent growth rate if the industry keeps expanding at a 10 percent rate
through 2025.
Indeed, the percent annual growth rate for
non-hydro renewables has already declined from a peak of 19 percent in
2011 to 10 percent in 2014. So these two scenarios are both wrong—but useful nonetheless.
It’s likely that reality will fall somewhere in between these two
cases, with annual percent growth rates slowly falling each year, but
with growth in absolute terms expanding for quite a while longer at
least.
Has the great Clean Energy Stagnation come to an end?
Where
does that leave us then? Is the great Clean Energy Stagnation over? And
can renewables grow fast enough to reduce fossil energy generation in
absolute terms (i.e. in terawatt-hours), not just in percentage terms?
As
these two scenarios illustrate, it all depends on how much longer the
renewable energy industry can continue to expand at rapid compound
annual growth rates. If renewable capacity grows linearly, that
won’t be fast enough to drive fossil energy out of the global energy
mix, as illustrated by Scenario 1 above. Renewables will keep fossil
energy’s share of the global electricity market from expanding
much in this scenario, but as global demand is growing as well, fossil
fueled electricity generation will continue to increase in absolute
terms. Only if renewables can continue to grow much faster than
energy demand over the next two decades and beyond, as in Scenario 2,
will they truly displace fossil fuels in the world’s electricity
supply—in both market share and absolute terms.
Now I’ll hazard to
present my best guess: renewables will follow a typical S-curve of
adoption, continuing to experience strong compound annual growth over
the next decade, but with a steadily declining rate of growth. Just as
we’ve seen the compound annual growth rate decline from 19 percent to 10
percent from 2011 to 2014, this rate will continue to decline over the
next decade or so.
The bad news here is that as soon as the growth
rate for renewables declines below the rate of electricity demand
growth, the market share of wind, solar, and other renewable sources in
the global electricity supply will begin to stagnate and decline. And
long before that point, total consumption of fossil fuels for electricity generation will begin to climb once again.
This
is exactly what happened after nuclear energy’s initial expansion began
to slow. Nuclear’s share grew from 8.5 percent in 1980 to a peak of
17.5 percent of global electricity by 1995, helping drive fossil
energy’s share down from 69.4 percent to 60.5 percent over that period.
Then as nuclear construction stalled out, and more recently as plants in
Germany, Japan, and elsewhere were idled, nuclear’s share fell to 12
percent in 2011 and 10.5 percent by 2014.
Meanwhile, fossil-fueled electricity generation grew more than 150 percent from 1980 to 2014.
Indeed,
the stall-out in nuclear’s growth was one of the principal causes
behind the ‘Clean Energy Stagnation’ of the last three decades.
Can renewable energy continue to grow exponentially?
Clearly
the reasons behind the slow down in nuclear construction differ from
the potential challenges facing the renewable energy industry. But
renewable energy faces its own challenges to continual exponential
growth.
One is the simple mathematics of compounding growth: as
explained above, it will take far more effort to sustain 10 percent
growth a decade from now than it does today.
Yet there are several other challenges ahead for rapid renewable energy growth:
- The declining marginal value of renewables as they approach a market share equal to their capacity factor;
- Land use impacts of renewable sources, and resulting NIMBYism;
- The need to continually replace aging capacity;
- The need for transmission network expansion to tap into and aggregate geographically disperse renewables; and
- The increasing challenges of integrating variable renewables at larger market shares.
Technical
innovations and public policy measures can help push back or mute the
impact of these challenges, but not without cost and only given
sufficient political will.
How to permanently end the great Clean Energy Stagnation
The
global growth of renewable energy is a remarkable success. We have now
entered an era where renewable energy sources are expanding fast enough
to register on the global level, shrinking fossil energy’s market share.
That’s a huge deal. Yet banking on the renewable energy sector
sustaining exponential growth over several decades is probably a
foolhardy wager. It would defy everything we know about technology
diffusion, in the energy sector and otherwise.
If the compound rate of renewables growth slows, as it most likely will, what will pick up the slack?
The
best way to ensure the share of global electricity from low-carbon
sources continues to expand—and more importantly, fossil generation
declines in absolute terms—is to scale up a diverse portfolio of low-carbon sources, each as rapidly as possible.
That means not putting all our eggs in the renewables basket. It means getting nuclear energy growing again globally—a tough challenge when virtually the entire existing fleet of reactors will retire between now and 2040 as well.
Finally,
it means developing lower-cost, scalable carbon capture and
sequestration (CCS) options, especially systems that can be retrofit
onto existing coal plants, which are being built in droves across the
emerging economies. That’s a serious technical challenge, but one that
needs an equally serious effort. Even if renewables (and nuclear) scale
rapidly, the world will have to deal with a substantial installed base of relatively young coal plants across China, India, and elsewhere. In
short, permanently ending the Clean Energy Stagnation and driving
fossil fuels out of the global electricity mix will ultimately require
everything we’ve got: renewables, nuclear, and even CCS.
http://theenergycollective.com/jessejenkins/2213301/has-renewable-energy-finally-ended-great-clean-energy-stagnation
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