Watt's#57 RenewablesTakeLead

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Watts Happening?

Written by Don Pettit


for Peace Energy Cooperative, Dawson Creek, BC Canada
www.peaceenergy.ca ph 250-782-3882

Renewables Take the Lead!

According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance and other sources, the world is now adding more capacity from
renewable power each year than from conventional energy sources, an historic first and theres no going back.

ast year was an historic year for the first


time, the world added more renewable energy
capacity than new capacity from all fossil fuels
combined. Future projections show fossil investment
plummeting while clean energy skyrockets.
This historic announcement was made at
Bloomberg New Energy Finances annual summit
meeting earlier this month. According to Bloomberg,
the world added 141 GW (one gigawatt = 1,000
megawatts) of fossil energy in 2013, but 143 GW of

clean energy in the same year. Renewables pulled


ahead for the first time.
Projections for 2015 show fossils falling to 110
GW with renewables surging to 164 GW. Fossils are
predicted to fall steadily over the next few decades,
with 2030 showing about 64 GW of new capacity,
while clean energy soars to 279 GW in the same year,
mostly solar followed closely by wind.
Sure, the numbers vary depending on whose study
you read, but the trend is clear and accelerating.

When I first became interested in renewables


about 40 years ago, the transition to a clean energy
world powered by energies supplied free from nature
seemed centuries away, some utopic dream. Today, it
is happening so quickly that its taking everyone by
surprise.
WIND IS SOARING
The global wind sector set a new record last year,
building more than 51 GW of new capacity, for a
world total capacity of 372 GW. China continued to
lead the way, installing an astounding 23 GW in one
year.
SOLAR IS SHINING
In 2013 Australia installed one million rooftop solar
arrays, and put up another million in 2014. Japan hit
one million solar roofs in 2014, and expects to double
that this year. Amazing.
WHY?
Why such a rapid shift to clean energy? There are
many reasons, but here are a few to ponder:
*A decade ago we werent sure, but now we know
that the world CAN supply ALL of its energy from
renewables. The changeover will take a few decades,
but it is entirely doable and it wont break the bank.
No new technology is needed.
*Investment in renewables shows good, steady long
term returns, and is not subject to unpredictable boom
and bust cycles.
*Renewables help slow and eventually may halt
catastrophic climate change. Big benefit there!
*Renewables reduce health care costs and improve
quality of life. This is a big motivator in China, for
instance, where breathing has become an issue.

*Renewables are distributed across the landscape,


spreading out the benefits to more people, creating
more secure and efficient grids. (You can own a rooftop solar array that makes all the electricity you need,
for instance, but you will never be able to own your
own nuclear reactor. Thank goodness.)
*Renewables are diverse. There are a zillion different
ways of creating new clean energy from nature,
some of which we havent even imagined yet, but its
already pretty diverse: solar, wind, geothermal, tidal,
wave, hydro, biomass . . . A diverse electrical supply is
more robust and more secure than highly centralized,
single-source energy supplies.
*Renewables have a relatively small environmental
footprint, and as more renewable energy is used to
produce more renewable energy, this only improves.
*Energy from renewables cost less. Once the
renewable energy infrastructure is in place, it costs
very little to run because the fuel is supplied for
free. The up-front cost of that infrastructure is also
plummeting, as the economies of scale kick in, clearly
demonstrated by the recent decline in the cost of solar.
*Renewables are fast. With a high level of social
license, low environmental footprint and quick to
upscale with mass production, renewables can break
all records for speed of implementation.
Renewables are not yet business as usual but
they soon will be. Germany, one of the worlds most
technologically advanced and industrialized countries
and one of the most financially sound, is now close to
50 percent renewable (mostly solar and wind), and is
aiming for 100 percent by 2050.
Germany is not alone. One by one, we will see
countries, states and provinces achieve 100 percent.
They will be the leaders and will benefit the most from
this, the greatest (and fastest!) energy transition in
human history.
And thats a very good thing.

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