Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Earth

Renewables Growth Rate Insufficient To Reach 2030 Target, Says IRENA (reuters.com) 49

The world risks missing a goal to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030 as the current growth rate is inadequate, a report by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) showed on Thursday. From a report: A U.N. climate change conference in Dubai last year set a goal of tripling renewable energy capacity worldwide by 2030 to more than 11 terawatts (TW). Countries have to submit new or updated climate target commitments every five years after 2020 so next year they have to include revised ambitions for 2030. About 473 gigawatts (GW) of capacity was added last year, representing a 14% increase from the year before and the largest annual growth since 2000, IRENA said in a report. To meet the target, the world will have to add renewables capacity at a minimum 16.4% rate annually to 2030. However, if last year's 14% increase rate continues, the 11 TW target will be 1.5 TW short. Further reading: World Will Miss Target of Tripling Renewable Electricity Generation By 2030, IEA Says.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Renewables Growth Rate Insufficient To Reach 2030 Target, Says IRENA

Comments Filter:
  • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Thursday July 11, 2024 @03:48PM (#64619597) Homepage

    I'm actually surprised that we're that close to being on target to reach the 2030 goal.

    It says that to meet the target, the world will have to add renewables capacity at a minimum 16.4% rate annually, and last year we were at 14% increase from the year before. Pretty close.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The target is far too low. That is why it is reachable without massive efforts. This also nicely shows that the worst effects of climate change will _not_ be avoided because the human race is incapable of doing so.

    • If we actually want more renewables, then we at least need environmental organizations to stop f-ing fighting it. It's bad enough when big energy companies do, but at least that's understandable. Yes, large scale solar farms might harm some local ecosystems and make things tough for someone's precious rare insect that lives in the desert or whatever, but those are the breaks. We need to make tradeoffs somewhere--and not in the reality of supplying the needs of ever increasing power demand, which centurie
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'm actually surprised that we're that close to being on target to reach the 2030 goal.

      Because last year, one single country installed as much solar panels as the *rest of the entire world* did in the same period. And that one year's installation is more than all of the US's past installation since the dawn of time.

      That single country is not the USA. That single country is China. That's why you, presumably looking from America, was surprised, because US media did not tell you about this.

      Meanwhile, the US is busy raising tariffs on solar panels to put a bumper on the installation rate.

      • I'm actually surprised that we're that close to being on target to reach the 2030 goal.

        Because last year, one single country installed as much solar panels as the *rest of the entire world* did in the same period. And that one year's installation is more than all of the US's past installation since the dawn of time. That single country is not the USA. That single country is China.

        Although it's true that China is greatly expanding their solar installation [they're expanding all of their energy production], you're incorrect in implying that therefore the US is not.

        A record 31 gigawatts (GW) of solar energy capacity was installed in the U.S. in 2023, a roughly 55% increase from 2022 installations. [citation] [wri.org]

        That's why you, presumably looking from America, was surprised, because US media did not tell you about this.

        Correct that the US media is not emphasizing the record increase in solar installations in the US.

        Meanwhile, the US is busy raising tariffs on solar panels to put a bumper on the installation rate.

        Very controversial. On the one hand, the US does not want to support Chinese indus

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Even the 2030 goal is still going to result in major changes to climate, and massive upheaval and people are forced to move around. Not to mention the economic damage, both from direct losses and from the knock-on effects.

      We need a moon-shot for this. An international moon-shot that recognizes that now is not the time for tariffs and patents, now is the time to be mass producing stuff to reach net zero, and making sure everyone has access to it.

  • by mspohr ( 589790 ) on Thursday July 11, 2024 @03:54PM (#64619611)

    China is installing twice as much renewable energy (solar and wind) as the rest of the world put together.
    They will benefit from lots of cheap energy while the rest of us will be stuck paying for expensive fossil fuel.

    • China is installing twice as much renewable energy (solar and wind) as the rest of the world put together.
      They will benefit from lots of cheap energy while the rest of us will be stuck paying for expensive fossil fuel.

      ... you are in for a bit of a shock when you get the construction and subsidies bills for the Nuclear powerplants.

      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        This is wind and solar, not nuclear.

        • Actually it's wind and solar... and nuclear... and coal... and anything else than can make a watt. China is electrifying a nation where portions of the population still cook with wood over pit fires. It's a very different animal to an established economy, and given they're still running a pseudo command economy where they're trying to dump solar panels as an economic weapon I'd expect them to continue to install them as a way to sop up overflow.

          • by mspohr ( 589790 )

            It's wind and solar.
            https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]

          • by flink ( 18449 )

            To be fair, they also have a lot of aging coal plants reaching end of life. So some percentage of those new plants are replacing ones going out of service. I couldn't find an exact number in the sea of articles excoriating them for the gross number instead of looking at net coal capacity growth though. There's only so fast they can build wind and solar and in the meanwhile they can't let other areas go dark and they still need base load for new areas they are electrifying as well.

            I'm not a fan of China's

    • China is installing twice as much renewable energy (solar and wind) as the rest of the world put together. They will benefit from lots of cheap energy while the rest of us will be stuck paying for expensive fossil fuel.

      Ah, the benefits of an authoritarian government that can simply "make it so". Ironically, if the U.S. gets one in 2025, looks like we'll go the other way 'cause "drill, drill, drill" -- even though the U.S. already produces more oil than any other country [worldometers.info] -- and because the former President and Project 2025 [project2025.org] -- written by many people in, and supporters of, the former administration -- condemns renewable sources of energy.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        While obviously we don't want a CCP style authoritarian non-democratic government, we do need to massively reform planning laws and infrastructure building in many developed nations.

        The UK is a great example. It's hard to build anything because of the way the planning system works, and because NIMBYs always object. There are good reasons to object in many cases, e.g. house builders don't put in any infrastructure like schools and doctor's surgeries, but those can be resolved by planning reform that simply r

    • China is installing twice as much renewable energy (solar and wind) as the rest of the world put together.

      Not only that, but 6 years ago China pledged a renewable energy target for 2030. They are on track to hit that target this year and their present project list shows no sign of slowing down.

  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Thursday July 11, 2024 @03:59PM (#64619625)
    Seize and shutdown Bitcoin miners and AI servers instead, get that power down. Imagine if Comcast ran the electricity supply, they'd cap excessive users fast.
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      Imagine if Comcast ran the electricity supply, they'd cap excessive users fast.

      Comcast's general internet access plans are flat monthly rate. right? Poor comparison.
      If Comcast could they would run their ISP the same as a power utility and charge for every meg.

    • I pay for business internet at home so I don't have to put up with caps and it's more expensive yes but it's not metered and it's not that much more expensive. When it comes to capping people they always focus on regular Joe's and never on the businesses.

      It's why the Southwest is currently enforcing strict water regulations on people while California grows a shit ton of water intensive crops and Arizona only just now stop letting Saudi Arabia pump unlimited water to grow alfalfa that was only being grow
      • I think you described a microcosm of the entire global warming issue. People are demanded to give up their vehicles, live in cells, and "eat ze bugs", all the while we are seeing insanely more energy demand by businesses mining cryptocurrency, doing AI number crunching or other stuff. If the focus changes to where the problem actually lies, we will actually see that 1.5 to 2 degree temperature rise start getting mitigated. Otherwise, it will keep increasing.

    • Not if they were charging for ever byte.

    • I might get power sometime between 1:30-5? And if I used too much, I would get half-voltage only.
  • Checked the IEA, their study supports an almost 50% increase between 2022 and 2023. Meaning the target would be overshot. Multiple data sources, yaaaay.
    • by jsonn ( 792303 )
      Quoting the IEA: "But despite the unprecedented growth over the past 12 months, the world needs to go further to triple capacity by 2030, which countries agreed to do at COP28."
      • We really need to do it retroactively about 120 years ago, and delay our industrialization a bit while we figure out solar, wind, geothermal, hydro, and storage.

        That of course is impossible, so we have to do what we can today. And until we're at 100% renewable or closed-carbon-loop fuels, we should be trying to do more.

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Thursday July 11, 2024 @11:15PM (#64620193) Journal
    But more importantly, it should NOT be about 'renewables', but about CLEAN energy i.e. that which does not emit any measurable amount of GHGs.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      You are trying to avoid saying nuclear, but often nuclear isn't particularly good on emissions. It needs fuel, and the plant itself is a large industrial process. Lots of concrete to build.

      The more important factor is cost. We could have the perfect, zero emission energy source, but it wouldn't help if hardly anyone could afford it. Especially developing nations need lower cost options that can displace coal and gas.

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

Working...