Half of Global Electricity To Come From Renewables IEA Says
Nearly 50% of global electricity supplies must come from renewable energy sources in order to cut CO2 emissions in half by 2050.
This is the position of the International Energy Agency (IEA) as stated in its latest study, "Deploying Renewables: Principles for Effective Policies."
Meeting these very ambitious objectives to "minimize significant and irreversible climate change" will require unprecedented political commitment and effective policy design and implementation, the IEA said. The IEA is also urging governments to adopt effective policies based on five key design principles to accelerate the exploitation of the "large potential for renewable energy."
Nonetheless, the IEA also recognizes the scale of such an undertaking, saying in a statement, "this is a huge challenge and part of the entire energy revolution we need to achieve."
Commenting at the launch of the study, Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the IEA, said, "Only a limited set of countries have implemented effective support policies for renewables and there is a large potential for improvement. Several countries have made important progress in recent years in fostering renewables, with renewable energy markets expanding considerably as a result. However, much more can and should be done at the global level - in OECD member countries, large emerging economies and other countries - to address the urgent need of transforming our unsustainable energy present into a clean and secure energy future."
The report says that there are still significant barriers which hamper a swift expansion and increase the costs of accelerating renewables' transition into the mainstream. If these were removed, it could allow renewables to be exploited much more rapidly and to a much larger extent.
"Governments need to do more. Setting a carbon price is not enough. To foster a smooth and efficient transition of renewables towards mass market integration, renewable energy policies should be designed around a set of fundamental principles, inserted into predictable, transparent and stable policy frameworks and implemented in an integrated approach," Tanaka said. "Moving a strong portfolio of renewable energy technologies towards full market integration is one of the main elements needed to make the energy technology revolution happen."
The report concludes that renewable policy design should reflect:
1) Removal of non-economic barriers, such as administrative, grid access, poor electricity market design, lack of information and training, and the tackling of social acceptance issues
A predictable and transparent support framework to attract investments
2) The introduction of transitional incentives, decreasing over time, to foster innovation and move technologies quickly towards competitiveness
3) The development and implementation of appropriate incentives guaranteeing a specific level of support to different technologies based on their degree of maturity
4) Consideration of the impact of large-scale penetration of renewable energy technologies on the overall energy system, especially in liberalized energy markets, with regard to overall cost efficiency and system reliability
Paris, France - David Appleyard, Renewable Energy World Magazine
Nearly 50% of global electricity supplies must come from renewable energy sources in order to cut CO2 emissions in half by 2050.
This is the position of the International Energy Agency (IEA) as stated in its latest study, "Deploying Renewables: Principles for Effective Policies."
Meeting these very ambitious objectives to "minimize significant and irreversible climate change" will require unprecedented political commitment and effective policy design and implementation, the IEA said. The IEA is also urging governments to adopt effective policies based on five key design principles to accelerate the exploitation of the "large potential for renewable energy."
Nonetheless, the IEA also recognizes the scale of such an undertaking, saying in a statement, "this is a huge challenge and part of the entire energy revolution we need to achieve."
Commenting at the launch of the study, Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the IEA, said, "Only a limited set of countries have implemented effective support policies for renewables and there is a large potential for improvement. Several countries have made important progress in recent years in fostering renewables, with renewable energy markets expanding considerably as a result. However, much more can and should be done at the global level - in OECD member countries, large emerging economies and other countries - to address the urgent need of transforming our unsustainable energy present into a clean and secure energy future."
The report says that there are still significant barriers which hamper a swift expansion and increase the costs of accelerating renewables' transition into the mainstream. If these were removed, it could allow renewables to be exploited much more rapidly and to a much larger extent.
"Governments need to do more. Setting a carbon price is not enough. To foster a smooth and efficient transition of renewables towards mass market integration, renewable energy policies should be designed around a set of fundamental principles, inserted into predictable, transparent and stable policy frameworks and implemented in an integrated approach," Tanaka said. "Moving a strong portfolio of renewable energy technologies towards full market integration is one of the main elements needed to make the energy technology revolution happen."
The report concludes that renewable policy design should reflect:
1) Removal of non-economic barriers, such as administrative, grid access, poor electricity market design, lack of information and training, and the tackling of social acceptance issues
A predictable and transparent support framework to attract investments
2) The introduction of transitional incentives, decreasing over time, to foster innovation and move technologies quickly towards competitiveness
3) The development and implementation of appropriate incentives guaranteeing a specific level of support to different technologies based on their degree of maturity
4) Consideration of the impact of large-scale penetration of renewable energy technologies on the overall energy system, especially in liberalized energy markets, with regard to overall cost efficiency and system reliability
Paris, France - David Appleyard, Renewable Energy World Magazine



Comments on Half of Global Electricity To Come From Renewables IEA Says
Good article that points out the necessity of governmental support as well as will power to bring renewable energy generation completely into the mainstream.
I am heartened by the fact the recent rescue package for the banking industry does extend the tax incentives on solar energy but more importantly lifts the $2000 "cap" on these credits. Let us hope that this is just the begining of the support we will see coming in the future.
Oil may have dropped recently but it is a momentary respite from a climb back to $150 a barrel and beyond. Our future security as well as the environment depend on the willingness of governments to implement policies that encourage the development of renewable energy and inparticular wind and solar power
Jeff Dahlgren
www.motherearthenergy.com
Posted by: Jeff Dahlgren | October 27, 2008 11:38 PM