Zürcher Nachrichten - Climate goals need clean energy surge in Global South: IEA

EUR -
AED 4.255569
AFN 73.569217
ALL 95.755613
AMD 437.008887
ANG 2.073921
AOA 1062.400492
ARS 1596.510973
AUD 1.662617
AWG 2.088017
AZN 1.968901
BAM 1.953568
BBD 2.334712
BDT 142.259279
BGN 1.980339
BHD 0.439124
BIF 3438.030034
BMD 1.158561
BND 1.481871
BOB 8.010227
BRL 6.057769
BSD 1.159165
BTN 109.038223
BWP 15.797698
BYN 3.435693
BYR 22707.797359
BZD 2.331587
CAD 1.598536
CDF 2638.628761
CHF 0.915906
CLF 0.026812
CLP 1058.588213
CNY 7.985615
CNH 7.995352
COP 4292.932262
CRC 539.005004
CUC 1.158561
CUP 30.701869
CVE 110.497782
CZK 24.450503
DJF 206.440134
DKK 7.472354
DOP 69.51338
DZD 153.265352
EGP 60.806419
ERN 17.378416
ETB 182.473596
FJD 2.601259
FKP 0.865707
GBP 0.865335
GEL 3.133915
GGP 0.865707
GHS 12.668845
GIP 0.865707
GMD 85.150373
GNF 10169.266904
GTQ 8.872091
GYD 242.541684
HKD 9.05755
HNL 30.725138
HRK 7.532503
HTG 152.011542
HUF 385.871527
IDR 19528.705728
ILS 3.60762
IMP 0.865707
INR 108.560417
IQD 1517.715028
IRR 1521219.675342
ISK 143.197193
JEP 0.865707
JMD 182.596072
JOD 0.821466
JPY 184.294578
KES 150.269031
KGS 101.315237
KHR 4645.830177
KMF 493.54763
KPW 1042.721602
KRW 1736.022326
KWD 0.354636
KYD 0.966042
KZT 559.322576
LAK 24995.955609
LBP 103749.145909
LKR 364.576538
LRD 212.76958
LSL 19.753733
LTL 3.42093
LVL 0.700802
LYD 7.379732
MAD 10.804718
MDL 20.2698
MGA 4819.613964
MKD 61.646764
MMK 2433.17245
MNT 4135.44684
MOP 9.335438
MRU 46.49301
MUR 53.873392
MVR 17.911178
MWK 2011.261646
MXN 20.551814
MYR 4.593669
MZN 74.043317
NAD 19.7532
NGN 1600.610517
NIO 42.542292
NOK 11.215879
NPR 174.464166
NZD 1.989644
OMR 0.445468
PAB 1.15923
PEN 4.006882
PGK 4.995141
PHP 69.446508
PKR 323.325465
PLN 4.273631
PYG 7542.446202
QAR 4.222375
RON 5.094658
RSD 117.44566
RUB 93.873663
RWF 1690.34063
SAR 4.346593
SBD 9.317119
SCR 15.810264
SDG 696.295134
SEK 10.785219
SGD 1.482188
SHP 0.869221
SLE 28.497915
SLL 24294.459313
SOS 662.119922
SRD 43.261249
STD 23979.875432
STN 24.874307
SVC 10.14354
SYP 128.540334
SZL 19.75347
THB 37.709977
TJS 11.100278
TMT 4.066549
TND 3.362145
TOP 2.789536
TRY 51.387863
TTD 7.882299
TWD 36.959244
TZS 2977.57035
UAH 50.895102
UGX 4289.209702
USD 1.158561
UYU 46.927388
UZS 14140.237955
VES 531.638381
VND 30528.084714
VUV 138.457402
WST 3.172374
XAF 655.236527
XAG 0.015925
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.131069
XCG 2.089294
XDR 0.813879
XOF 654.010453
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.435289
ZAR 19.583271
ZMK 10428.435247
ZMW 21.707225
ZWL 373.056198
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.92

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    15.9

    +1.89%

  • CMSD

    0.1250

    22.755

    +0.55%

  • VOD

    0.1250

    14.785

    +0.85%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • RIO

    1.1100

    87.88

    +1.26%

  • BCE

    -0.1600

    25.67

    -0.62%

  • BTI

    0.6800

    58.44

    +1.16%

  • GSK

    1.9950

    54.945

    +3.63%

  • BCC

    1.0200

    74.59

    +1.37%

  • NGG

    2.3200

    84.65

    +2.74%

  • JRI

    0.3100

    12.17

    +2.55%

  • AZN

    2.9000

    188.68

    +1.54%

  • BP

    0.7350

    45.525

    +1.61%

Climate goals need clean energy surge in Global South: IEA
Climate goals need clean energy surge in Global South: IEA / Photo: MARCO LONGARI - AFP/File

Climate goals need clean energy surge in Global South: IEA

Financing for clean energy in developing and emerging economies excluding China must increase seven-fold within a decade if global warming is to be capped at tolerable levels, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday.

Text size:

To keep Paris climate temperature goals in play, annual investment for non-fossil fuel energy in these countries will need to jump from $260 billion to nearly $2 trillion, the intergovernmental agency said in a report.

"Financing clean energy in the emerging and developing world is the fault line of reaching international climate goals," IEA executive director Fatih Birol told journalists in a briefing Tuesday.

The report comes on the eve of the two-day Summit for a New Global Financing Pact in Paris, which seeks to galvanise support for revamping the mid-20th century architecture governing financial flows from rich to developing nations.

Speeding the transition from dirty to clean energy, and helping the Global South cope with and prepare for devastating climate impacts are high on the summit agenda.

Virtually all of the nearly 800 million people lacking electricity and the 2.4 billion without access to clean cooking fuels are in poor and emerging countries.

Under current policy trends, one third of the rise in energy use in these nations over the next decade will be met by burning fossil fuels, the main driver of global warming, the IEA warned.

"Clean energy investments is increasing gradually -- this is a good news," said Birol.

"The bad news is that more than 90 percent of that increase in clean energy since the Paris Agreement in 2015 comes from advanced economies and China."

"Only 10 percent comes from the emerging and developing countries," he added. "We need to change this trend."

- Solar is cheapest -

With China included in the calculation, private and public money pouring into renewables and other forms of carbon neutral energy will need to more than triple from $770 billion in 2022 to about $2.5 trillion per year by the early 2030s.

Investment must remain at those levels until mid-century to help keep Earth's average surface temperature "well below" two degrees Celsius, and 1.5C if possible, the Paris climate treaty's binding and aspirational targets, respectively.

The potential for rapidly ramping up renewable energy is there, according to the report.

At least 40 percent of the global solar radiation reaching the planet lands on sub-Saharan Africa, and solar energy is now the cheapest source of electricity generation across almost the entire world.

And yet, nearly ten times more solar PV capacity was installed last year in China -- some 100 GW -- than across the entire African continent.

Sunny sub-Saharan Africa generates less solar electricity than the Netherlands, Birol noted.

According to the report, two-thirds of the finance for clean energy projects in emerging and developing economies excluding China will need to come from the private sector.

Today's $135 billion in annual private financing for clean energy in these economies must rise to about a trillion a year within the next decade.

To meet both climate and sustainability goals, clean energy investment in emerging and developing economies should be concentrated in four areas, according to the IEA.

Just over a third should go into low-emissions generation, mainly solar and wind. Another third is needed to improve efficiency in end-use sectors, such as cooling and electric transport.

A quarter is required for electricity grids and storage capacity, while just under 10 percent goes to low-emission fuels and so-called carbon, capture and storage (CCS), which removes CO2 from the exhaust of gas or coal power plants and heavy industry.

B.Brunner--NZN