Big changes are afoot for the energy sector in the next 25 years. Coal and gas are headed out and solar and wind are rushing to take their place on a multi-trillion dollar investment bonanza, according to a from Bloomberg New Energy Finance that scopes out the power generating landscape through 2040.
The main reason for the big shift in power generation isn’t likely to be because of a , or , though. Instead, it comes down to cold, hard cash with renewables offering more power-generating bang for the buck than fossil fuels. Here are the three big numbers.
2. Renewables will account for nearly 60 percent of new generating capacity
Fossil fuels currently account for roughly two-thirds of all power generating capacity with renewables and nuclear making up the rest. The rapid rise of renewables will essentially flip the script and fossil fuels will only account for a third of world’s power generating capacity. Solar and wind will account for 26 percent and 14 percent respectively, up from a measly 2 percent and 5 percent in the present.
The U.S. is forecast to see a continued bump in natural gas capacity through 2020 thanks to its cheap, abundant nature. However, gas will lose its price edge to renewables, and with it, its market share, shortly thereafter.
But wind’s reign will be short. By 2030, —big arrays of panels, not the rooftop version—will take the title of cheapest new power source.
The trend of ever-cheaper renewables is already underway. Solar power project costs have fallen a since 2009 while onshore wind costs have fallen 11.5 percent over that time.
Continued price drops and not any particular policy are what are likely to spur the widespread adoption of wind and solar, according to the new Bloomberg report.
Greenhouse gas emissions from power generation could peak by 2029 and decline slightly thereafter. However, they’ll still be 13 percent above current levels meaning there’s still more work to be done to address the root causes of climate change.
Climate Central. The article was
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