IEA: urges governments to seize the opportunity to accelerate clean energy deployment
25 February 2012 London [για μεταφραση κλικ στην ελληνικη σημαία]--- While progress is being made on renewable energy, most clean energy technologies are not being deployed quickly enough, the International Energy Agency
(IEA) said today in an annual progress report presented to ministers
and representatives of nations that together account for four-fifths of
global energy demand.
The report, Tracking Clean Energy Progress,
highlighted the rapid progress made in some renewable technologies,
notably the solar panels easily installed by households and businesses
(solar PV) and in onshore wind technologies. In fact, onshore wind has
seen 27% average annual growth over the past decade, and solar PV has
grown at 42%, albeit from a small base. Even more impressive is the 75%
reduction in system costs for solar PV in as little as three years in
some countries. This serves as evidence that rapid technology change is
possible. Unfortunately, however, the report concludes that most clean
energy technologies are not on track to make their required contribution
to reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and thereby provide a more
secure energy system.
“We have a responsibility and a golden
opportunity to act,” said IEA Deputy Executive Director Ambassador
Richard H Jones. “Energy-related CO2 emissions are at historic highs;
under current policies, we estimate that energy use and CO2 emissions
would increase by a third by 2020, and almost double by 2050. This would
likely send global temperatures at least 6°C higher. Such an outcome
would confront future generations with significant economic,
environmental and energy security hardships – a legacy that I know none
of us wishes to leave behind.”
The report, which Ambassador Jones
presented at the third Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM) in London, urges
aggressive policy action to take full advantage of the benefits offered
by clean energy technologies. In sounding the alarm over the report’s
findings, Ambassador Jones stressed the positive role the CEM can play
in improving the situation.
“The ministers meeting this week in
London have an incredible opportunity before them,” he said. “It is my
hope that they heed our warning of insufficient progress, and act to
seize the security, economic and environmental benefits that a
clean-energy transition can bring.”
The report notes that many
technologies with great potential for energy and emissions savings are
making halting progress at best. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is not
seeing the necessary rates of investment to develop full-scale
demonstration projects, and nearly half of new coal-fired power plants
are still being built with inefficient technology. Vehicle
fuel-efficiency improvement is slow, and significant untapped
energy-efficiency potential remains in the building and industry
sectors.
In addition, while government targets for electric
vehicles (20 million by 2020) are ambitious, as are continued nuclear
expansion plans in many countries, translating plans into reality is
easier said than done. Manufacturers’ production targets for electric
vehicles after 2014 are highly uncertain; and increasing public
opposition to nuclear power is proving challenging to address.
The
report offers three over-arching policy recommendations for changing
this status quo and moving clean-energy technologies to the mainstream
market:
- First, level the playing field for clean energy technologies. This means ensuring that energy prices reflect the “true cost” of energy – accounting for the positive and negative impacts of energy production and consumption;
- Second, unlock the potential of energy efficiency, the “hidden fuel” of the future. Making sure that energy is not wasted and that it is used in the best possible way is the most cost-effective action and must be the first step of any policy aimed at building a sustainable energy mix’
- Finally, accelerate energy innovation and public support for research, development and demonstration. This will help lay the groundwork for private sector innovation, and speed technologies to market.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) is an autonomous organisation which works to ensure reliable, affordable and clean energy for its 28 member countries and beyond. Founded in response to the 1973/4 oil crisis, the IEA’s initial role was to help countries co-ordinate a collective response to major disruptions in oil supply through the release of emergency oil stocks to the markets. While this continues to be a key aspect of its work, the IEA has evolved and expanded. It is at the heart of global dialogue on energy, providing reliable and unbiased research, statistics, analysis and recommendations.
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