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‘Age of Electricity’ coming as fossil fuels set to peak: IEA

Thomas Barnes by Thomas Barnes
October 16, 2024
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IEA chief Fatih Birol says the world is 'moving at speed into the Age of Electricity'. ©AFP

Paris (AFP) – More than half of the world’s electricity will be generated by low-emission sources before 2030, but the deployment of clean energy is “far from uniform” across the globe, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said Wednesday. Demand for oil, gas, and coal is still projected to peak by the end of the decade, according to the IEA’s annual World Energy Outlook.

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“In energy history, we’ve witnessed the Age of Coal and the Age of Oil,” said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol. “We’re now moving at speed into the Age of Electricity, which will define the global energy system going forward and increasingly be based on clean sources of electricity,” he said. The report noted that clean energy “is entering the energy system at an unprecedented rate,” with 560 gigawatts (GW) of renewables capacity added in 2023. Almost $2 trillion in investments are flowing into clean energy projects each year, nearly double the amount spent on fossil fuel supplies, according to the Paris-based agency.

“Together with nuclear power, which is the subject of renewed interest in many countries, low-emissions sources are set to generate more than half of the world’s electricity before 2030,” the report stated. However, the IEA pointed out that the deployment of clean energy “is far from uniform across technologies and countries.” The growing thirst for electricity is driven by industry, electric vehicles, air conditioning, and data centres linked to the surge of artificial intelligence.

Despite the “growing momentum behind clean energy transitions,” the IEA indicated that the world is “still a long way from a trajectory aligned” with its goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2050. The net-zero emissions target is crucial to meet the Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels. The IEA report comes a month before Azerbaijan hosts the UN’s annual climate conference, COP29, in Baku, from November 11 to November 22.

At COP28 in Dubai last year, nations pledged to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030 and vowed to transition away from fossil fuels. The IEA projected that renewable power generation capacity is set to rise from 4,250 GW today to nearly 10,000 GW in 2030, as costs for most clean technologies are falling. While this falls short of the COP28 tripling target, it is “more than enough” to cover the growth in global electricity demand and “push coal-fired generation into decline.”

China accounted for 60 percent of the new renewable capacity added in the world last year. By the early 2030s, the country’s solar power generation is expected to exceed the total electricity demand of the United States today, according to the report. In many developing countries, however, “policy uncertainty and a high cost of capital are holding back clean energy projects.”

Global carbon dioxide emissions are set to peak “imminently,” but today’s policies still leave the world on a path towards a rise of 2.4C in average temperatures by 2100, the IEA cautioned. “2024 showed that electricity demand is insatiable,” said Dave Jones, global insights programme director at Ember, an energy think tank. “That means global coal generation would fall less quickly than previously expected. This means the world is not yet transitioning away from fossil fuels and reducing CO2 emissions in the energy sector,” he added.

Despite a record deployment of clean energy, the IEA noted that two-thirds of the increase in global energy demand was met by fossil fuels last year. “We will still need oil (for) many years to come,” Birol stated at a press conference. While demand is expected to plateau before 2030, “it doesn’t mean that it will decline immediately,” he said. “But we see a peak and the weakening of the global oil demand growth,” added Birol, who also said the prospect of more ample supplies of fossil fuels would ease pressure on prices.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: clean energyclimate changerenewable energy
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