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Renewable Energy Growth Rate Must Triple to 16.4% by 2030

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The renewable energy segment must exceed record growth rate in the remaining seven years to meet the COP28 energy target set by the UAE Consensus.

The IRENA’s Renewable Energy Statistics 2024 reveal that despite renewable energy’s rapid growth, the world may still fall short of the triple renewables target set at COP28.

The global renewable energy capacity must increase at a minimum annual rate of 16.4% by 2030 to maintain current trends.

Key findings:

The renewables capacity increased by 14% in 2023, resulting in a remarkable 10% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from 2017-2023.

The increasing use of renewable energy is predicted to surpass installed power capacity globally, as non-renewable capacity additions continue to decline over time.

IRENA’s 1.5°C Scenario predicts a 13.5% missed tripling target of 11.2 TW in 2030 if the 14% increase from last year persists.

The global renewable energy target of 7.5 TW will be missed by nearly one-third if the historical annual growth rate of 10% is maintained.

Data reflects regional disparities:

The 2022 data on power generation revealed regional disparities in the use of renewable energy sources.

Asia leads in renewable power generation with 3 749 TWh, followed by North America with 1 493 TWh. South America’s hydropower recovery and solar energy usage led to a 12% increase to 940 TWh.

In 2022, Africa’s renewable power generation reached 205 TWh, despite a moderate 3.5% growth, highlighting the continent’s significant potential and urgent need for sustainable development.

Stakeholders’ comment:

Francesco La Camera, Director General, IRENA, said, “Renewable energy has been increasingly outperforming fossil fuels, but it is not the time to be complacent. Renewables must grow at higher speed and scale. Our new report sheds light on the direction of travel; if we continue with the current growth rate, we will only face failure in reaching the tripling renewables target agreed in the UAE Consensus at COP28, consequently risking the goals of the Paris Agreement and 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.”

“Consolidated global figures conceal ongoing patterns of concentration in geography. These patterns threaten to exacerbate the decarbonization divide and pose a significant barrier to achieving the tripling target,” he added.

“Today’s report is a wake-up call for the entire world: while we are making progress, we are off track to meet the global goal of tripling renewable energy capacity to 11.2 TW by 2030. We need to increase the pace and scale of development.”

Dr Sultan Al Jaber, President, COP28, said, “This necessitates increasing collaboration between governments, the private sector, multilateral organisations, and the civil society. Governments need to set explicit renewable energy targets, look at actions like accelerating, permitting and expanding grid connections, and implement smart policies that push industries to step up and incentivize the private sector to invest. Additionally, this moment provides a significant opportunity to add strong national energy targets in NDCs to support the global goal of keeping the 1.5°C target within reach. Above all, we must change the narrative that climate investment is a burden to it being an unprecedented opportunity for shared socio-economic development.”


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COP28 Delegates Pledge Millions for Loss and Damage Fund

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Countries seeking more Loss and Damage (L&D) Fund to battle the impacts of the climate crisis can breathe a sigh of relief.

COP 28 delegates have pledged millions of dollars for the loss and damage fund. They reached a significant agreement on the operationalization of the fund to compensate vulnerable nations for climate change-related loss and damage.

The agreement establishes the “Climate Impact and Response Fund,” which will be housed within the World Bank on an interim basis.

The commitments:

UAE led the way with a $100 million commitment to the Fund.

Other countries making notable commitments included:

i.  Germany: $100million,
ii. The UK: £40million for the Fund and £20million for other arrangements
iii. Japan: $10million and
iv. the US: $17.5million.

Significance:

For many years, the fund has been deeply divisive and was formerly regarded as the third rail in international climate negotiations. It would use donations made voluntarily, primarily by wealthier nations, and send the money to developing countries to help them prepare for the effects of climate change.

Despite global warming mitigation goals being achieved, vulnerable communities will still face loss and damage due to “locked-in” warming, resulting in storms, floods, decreased agricultural productivity, and rising sea levels.

The Parties will focus on crafting a robust response to the Global Stocktake, a global report card on progress towards the Paris Agreement goals.

Quotes:

“The hard work of many people over many years, has been delivered in Dubai,” said Dr COP28 President Dr. Sultan Al Jaber. “The speed at which the world came together, to get this fund operationalized within one year since Parties agreed to it in Sharm El Sheikh is unprecedented.”

“The responsibility now lies with affluent nations to meet their financial obligations in a manner proportionate to their role in the climate crisis,” said Harjeet Singh, Head, Global Political Strategy, Climate Action Network International.

“Today’s news on loss and damage gives this UN climate conference a running start. All governments and negotiators must use this momentum to deliver ambitious outcomes here in Dubai,” said Simon Stiell, UN Climate Chief at a press conference.

Backdrop:

The Fund was first agreed upon during COP27, held in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, and becomes operational today following the agreement reached by parties during 5 transitional committee meetings. The 5th transitional meeting hosted earlier this month in Abu Dhabi was added by the COP28 Presidency following the impasse reached at the 4th meeting, where Parties resolved.


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Will COP28 fulfil its energy commitment?

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Even before COP28 is formally inaugurated on November 30, 2023, concerns are being raised about the energy strategy proposed by the COP28 President, Dr Sultan Al Jaber.

A coalition of 100 organizations, led by 350.org and Oil Change International, in an open letter, highlighted the energy strategy outlined by the COP28 president in two recent communications.

The open letter addresses concerns raised by Dr Al Jaber, who vetoed an ambitious outcome on fossil fuels and energy in two previous letters to diplomats and civil society.

The open letter advocates for a comprehensive, equitable, and funded phase-out of fossil fuels. It advises against pushing unrealistic measures like carbon capture and storage with energy-related outcomes.

The open letter emphasizes the need for COP28’s energy package outcome to be a formal part of the decision text, focusing on ending fossil fuel infrastructure expansion and phase-out.

“The Cop28 President’s leadership is under scrutiny. Dr. Sultan Al Jaber is the CEO of one of the largest oil companies on the planet and he has to deliver a decision to phase out fossil fuels and phase in renewable energy in line with 1.5 degrees as President of COP28. After his latest letters we have reasons for even bigger concerns and challenge the COP28 President to get behind a decision to rapidly phase out fossil fuels and phase in renewable energy instead of speaking of pledges and technologies like CCS we know won’t deliver in the foreseeable future,” wrote Andreas Sieber, Associate Director, Campaigns and Policy, 350.org

“The COP28 president has a unique power and responsibility to conduct impartial negotiations that prioritize the needs of people worldwide over the interest of the fossil fuel industry. The success of COP28 will be judged by whether countries formally agree to end fossil fuel expansion and build a just and equitable phase-out of all fossil fuels, enabled by providing the necessary funding to triple renewable energy and doubling energy efficiency. We urge the COP28 Presidency to focus on achieving that outcome instead of expanding scarce diplomatic time and capital to promoting voluntary pledges and initiatives that at best can become distractions from the main negotiations and might end up greenwashing the fossil fuel industry’s bet on climate failure,” added Romain Ioualalen, Manager, Global Policy, Oil Change International.


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Leadership, political will & affordability required to address Climate

Renjini Liza Varghese


An Amazon delivery boy jumped into the customer’s pool to beat the heat. To many, this may present a comical respite. But for me, the incident highlights the severity of heatwaves in California and the reality of the impact of severe changes in climate and temperature on the human race.

The current last week is a case in point. As we inch toward the weekend, we have witnessed havoc caused by the heavy downpour in Asia including India, the hottest summer in many European countries, the heatwave in the US, etc.  No, I am not going to dive deep into the damage or to the data in this blog. But I want to draw your attention to a joint statement by the UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell and COP28 President-Designate Dr Sultan Al Jaber at the G20 Energy Ministerial in Goa last Friday (21 July 2023).

The crux is “align action and political will going forward towards the common goal of closing the gaps across all of the pillars of the Paris Agreement and get on track to keep 1.5C within reach.”

No doubt the leadership by the G20 is Indispensable in climate action as the G20 countries are responsible for 85% of the world’s GDP, and also 80% of the world’s emissions.

This means we all know what is required to transition towards a net-zero economy. But apprehension about the benefits, growth, fear of diminishing profits/market share, and so on keeps people and enterprises away from real action.  I am of the view that the tide can be turned. What is required is a firm political will combined with corporate actions. I am not saying, there is no action, but more needs to be done as the TIME TO ACT IS NOW.

As a part of the sustainability community, I believe that sustainable development and a climate-resilient world come with great benefits for growth, poverty eradication and more. It just needs a collective will.

Discussions around climate change and climate action dominate the world today. But statements such as the one reproduced below ring alarming bells.

“While the discussions at the G20 Energy Ministerial considered energy transition and aligning current pathways with the Paris Goals, the outcome did not provide a sufficiently clear signal for transforming global energy systems, scaling up renewable and clean energy sources and responsibly phasing down fossil fuels.”

The fact is that climate change is hitting the human race hard. And the ‘climate vulnerable’ are looking at these leaderships to take decisive actions.

But I am still hopeful as the same statement also spoke about a more focused approach. “The science demands a strong mitigation outcome at COP28 that drives a significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and builds on the progress of previous COPs. We call on the G20 to lead the way on the basis of both science and equity, laying the path to a strong and credible outcome that provides developing countries with the basis to undertake a just transition.”

I hope at the end of COP28 we have more concrete actions committed, combined with a stronger political will from across the globe that is purpose-driven than just a thought for benefits or profits.


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