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Worldwatch Report: Roadmap to Low-Carbon Energy by 2030

by: Jill Richardson

Thu Dec 17, 2009 at 16:00:00 PM PST


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The Worldwatch Institute just released a report called "Roadmap to Low-Carbon Energy by 2030." While it doesn't really deal with food or agriculture, it is very interesting and very relevant to what is going on in Copenhagen right now. Here are a few quotes from the report that I found particularly interesting.

Between 1990 and 2007, world gross domestic product increased 156 percent while global energy demand rose 39 percent, pushing up
global CO2 emissions by 38 percent. Were it not for advances in energy efficiency - gains achieved without aggressive policies - the increase in energy use and associated emissions would have been much greater. Even so, more than half of the energy that we consume does not provide us with useful services, and there is enormous potential for improvement in all sectors of the economy.

In 2007, renewable energy provided more than 18 percent of total final energy supply. Solar energy, wind power, and other renewable technologies have experienced double-digit annual growth rates for more than a decade. The renewable share of additional global power generation (excluding large hydropower) jumped from 5 percent in 2003 to 23 percent in 2008, and this ratio is significantly greater in many individual countries.

A recent study revealed that there is an enormous gap between the nation's most and least efficient states and that by simply closing that gap, up to 30 percent of U.S. electricity consumption could be curtailed, displacing more than 60 percent of the nation's coal-fired generation and dramatically reducing national CO2 emissions.

Below you'll find the press release announcing the publication of this report along with a link to download it.

Jill Richardson :: Worldwatch Report: Roadmap to Low-Carbon Energy by 2030
Roadmap to Low-Carbon Energy by 2030

Worldwatch Report Highlights Potential of Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency in Concert

Copenhagen, Denmark - Tackling climate change and a host of other global challenges will require systematic transformation of the global energy system over the next several decades, according to Renewable Revolution: Low-Carbon Energy by 2030, by Janet Sawin and William Moomaw. The report, released by the Worldwatch Institute and the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), highlights four key synergies between energy efficiency and renewable energy and argues that these two strategies, used in concert, can play a key role in meeting rising global demand for energy services while averting catastrophic climate change.

"A low-carbon energy revolution is not only necessary, but also entirely achievable," says Worldwatch researcher and co-author Janet Sawin. "In this instance, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts: renewable energy and efficiency acting together can get us much farther than either can individually."

Due to the inherent efficiency of most renewable energy technologies relative to fossil fuels, renewable energy does not need to replace fossil fuels exajoule for exajoule. An enormous amount of energy is wasted when converting fossil fuels to energy services such as light, heat, and mobility. These losses can be side-stepped through the use of renewable energy, providing the same level of energy services with far less primary energy. In turn, improvements in energy efficiency make it easier, cheaper, and faster for renewables to achieve a large share of total energy production, while also rapidly reducing greenhouse gases and other emissions associated with energy use.

"Humanity can prevent catastrophic climate change if we act now and adopt policies that unleash the full potential of these resources," says co-author William Moomaw. "But this goal is not likely to be achieved if our only measure of success is emissions reductions. Climate change is fundamentally a development issue, not a pollution problem. No one benefits from the release of greenhouse gas emissions, but developed and developing nations alike will benefit in numerous ways from the transition to an energy-efficient and renewable world."

For more than a decade, solar power, wind power, and other renewable technologies have experienced double-digit annual growth rates. Renewables technologies are already enabling Germany, Spain, Sweden, the United States, and several other countries to avoid carbon dioxide emissions. And in recent years, several communities have successfully transitioned from fossil fuels to 100-percent renewable energy, or are well on their way.

"Each of these communities has taken its own path, but all have shared a major emphasis on improving energy efficiency in concert with a dramatic ramp-up in renewables," says Sawin. "For the world to avoid catastrophic climate change and an insecure economic future, this transition must be accelerated, with success stories scaled up and strategies shared across national boundaries."

A combination of political will and the right policies can capitalize on these achievements and get the world on track to mitigate climate change in the near term while also meeting rising demand for energy services, creating new jobs and boosting the global economy, providing energy access for the world's poorest people, and improving the natural environment and human health, the report concludes.

Renewable Revolution recommends three policy elements that must be implemented in parallel to achieve these goals:

  • Put a price on carbon that increases over time. This can be achieved through a cap-and-trade system, or through a "bottom tax" that sets a floor under fossil fuel prices and that increases each year.

  • Enact policies that overcome institutional and regulatory barriers to renewable energy and energy efficiency improvements and that drive the required revolution. For example, Germany's feed-in tariff has made the nation a renewable energy powerhouse. Over the past decade, electricity generation from wind power has increased by a factor of 10, and from solar photovoltaics (PV) by a factor of more than 100. Germany now generates more than 15 percent of its electricity with renewables and aims for 30 percent by 2020.

  • Develop a strategy for phasing out existing inefficient carbon-emitting capital stock, including old coal-fired power plants, that includes the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies.

The report concludes that this transition to a highly efficient economy utilizing renewable energy is essential for both developed and developing countries. Co-authors Sawin and Moomaw find that this is the only way that degradation of the climate system can be halted and is the only real option for raising billions of people out of poverty.

"We have a once-in-a-century opportunity to make a transformation from an unsustainable economy fueled by poorly distributed fossil fuels to an enduring and secure economy that runs on renewable energy and lasts forever," the authors write. "The energy choices made by policymakers and negotiators, and those made by all people during the next few years, will determine the energy future of much of the world for decades to come-and the future of the global climate and human civilization for centuries."

Janet Sawin is a Senior Researcher at the Worldwatch Institute and William Moomaw is Professor of International Environmental Policy at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, where he is founding director of the Center for International Environment and Resource Policy. Both are Coordinating Lead Authors of the forthcoming IPCC Special Report on Renewable Energy and Climate Change Mitigation. The report also includes contributions from other international experts.

Renewable Revolution was released at an official UNFCC side event in Copenhagen on Wednesday, December 16, 2009.

Download a PDF of Renewable Revolution: Low-Carbon Energy by 2030.

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