Wednesday, November 13, 2019

International Energy Agency Sees Encouraging Signs on Climate Change but Too Little, Too Late.



The International Energy Agency's World Energy Outlook 2019 sees renewable energy and electric vehicles coming on stream much faster than predicted but not nearly fast enough.

The New York Times summarizes the 810-page IEA report.

Since last year, the agency has significantly increased its future projections for offshore wind farms, solar installations and battery-powered cars, both because these technologies keep getting cheaper and because countries like India keep ramping up their clean-energy targets. 
But the report also issues a stark warning on climate change, estimating that the energy policies countries currently have on their books could cause global greenhouse gas emissions to continue rising for the next 20 years. One reason: The world’s appetite for energy keeps surging, and the rise of renewables so far hasn’t been fast enough to satisfy all that extra demand. The result: fossil fuels use, particularly natural gas, keeps growing to supply the rest. 
“Without new policies in place, the world will miss its climate goals by a very large margin,” said Fatih Birol, the agency’s executive director.
"The world urgently needs to put a laser-like focus on bringing down global emissions. This calls for a grand coalition encompassing governments, investors, companies and everyone else who is committed to tackling climate change."

2 comments:

Northern PoV said...

"The world urgently needs to put a laser-like focus on bringing down global emissions. This calls for a grand coalition encompassing governments, investors, companies and everyone else who is committed to tackling climate change."

Alas, I can't see a 'pearl-harbor' event that could produce this consensus before it's too late.

The Mound of Sound said...

It is hard to be optimistic given how deeply the fossil energy giants have their claws into our political caste. Everybody is afraid of triggering the next Great Depression.