100
Percent Renewable Energy is Within Reach
There are no technological or economic reasons why we cannot completely replace fossil fuels with renewable sources of energy.
In
addition to curbing climate change causing greenhouse gas emissions, renewable
energy also improves human health.
Minimizing climate impacts and reducing
health costs would generate trillions of dollars of cumulative savings.
The idea that the world
can be powered entirely by renewable energy is not new. In 2011, Stanford
researcher Mark Z. Jacobson and UC-Davis researcher Mark A Delucci concluded
that the world can be powered by clean and sustainable energy.
There are already
commitments and functioning examples of 100 percent renewable energy use. In
2014 a number of leading companies pledged to get their power entirely
from renewables. The EPA’s Green Power List
reviews the growing number of businesses, municipalities and universities that
use only clean energy.
Hawaii has been reducing
its dependence on fossil fuels to generate electricity, but the state still
uses petroleum for 70 percent of its energy generation. A new bill will abandon
oil altogether and require the state to get all of its energy from renewables
(primarily wind, solar, geothermal and hydro) by 2040.
California is working
towards the goal of getting one third of its electricity from renewable sources
by 2020. New research suggests that California could produce
enough solar energy to provide as much as five times the electricity it
currently consumes. This is achievable by deploying solar in developed areas
(roof tops or open spaces on the ground) close to where people live and consume
power.
California is already
getting more than 12 percent of its power from renewable sources and individual
cities in California are going even further. San Jose, San Francisco and San
Diego have all pledged to get off fossil fuels, starting in 2022, 2035 and 2020
respectively.
The San Diego 100% Renewables report shows how San Diego can get all
of its electricity from renewable energy.
As of 2014, Aspen Colorado
was getting more than 86 percent of its energy from renewables (hydro and wind)
and the city has vowed to go 100 percent renewable by the end of 2015. Early in
2015, Burlington, Vermont became the first US city to deliver on the promise to
end fossil fuel use for electricity and meet all of their power demands with
renewables (biomass, hydroelectric, solar and wind).
On March 18, 2015,
Georgetown, Texas announced that it would soon be generating 100 percent of its
electricity from renewable sources (solar and wind). What makes this noteworthy
is the fact that Texas is the largest oil producing state in the US. The reason
Georgetown is turning to renewables is because they are a cheaper source of
electricity than fossil fuels.
A number of studies show
that renewable energy can meet or exceed U.S. energy demands in a timely
fashion. U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) research indicates
that renewable energy can replace fossil fuels within 20 years.
Sandy
MacDonald, director of the earth system research lab at NOAA said that wind and
solar could supply 70 per cent of electricity demand in the lower 48 states,
with fossil fuel and hydro/nuclear renewables each accounting for just 15 per
cent by 2030.
The National Renewable
Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) Renewable Electricity Futures Study (RE Futures) found that
using a diverse array of commercially available technologies, the US could
easily supply 80 percent of its electricity needs with renewables by 2050.
The
Union of Concerned Scientists published a plan for renewable energy to provide
80 percent of our electricity by 2050.
A recent Stanford
paper entitled “100 percent Wind, Water,
Sunlight (WWS) All Sector Energy Plan for the 50 U.S. States,”
suggests that the United States can get all of their power needs from
renewables.
These U.S. examples
alongside research from all around the world (Europe, Asia, Latin America, Canada, Australia, Africa and the Middle
East) reveals that renewable energy has the potential to quickly and
affordably replace fossil fuel as the world’s primary source of energy.
As pointed out in a Bloomberg article, renewable energy has “passed a turning point” and we can now say with
confidence that 100 percent is possible. The world is shifting away from fossil
fuels and towards renewables.
Recent and future
prospects look very good for the growth of renewables. In 2014, renewable energy had one of the best years ever and it
is looking very good for 2015 and beyond.
“The shift occurred in 2013, when the world added 143 gigawatts of renewable electricity capacity, compared with 141 gigawatts in new plants that burn fossil fuels,” the article stated. “The shift will continue to accelerate, and by 2030 more than four times as much renewable capacity will be added.”
The fossil fuel lobby
frequently point to the problem of intermittency of renewables (eg the sun is
not always shining and the wind is not always blowing). However, as pointed out
in a another Bloomberg article, the example of Germany proves the
naysayers wrong.
Cheaper storage will
further minimize the so called intermittency problem. “There’s a myth among
opponents of renewable energy that you need 100 percent backup spinning all the
time, and it’s utter nonsense,” said Michael Liebreich, founder of Bloomberg
New Energy Finance.
The world will
transition away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy, the only
question that remains to be answered is how long it will take.
The real issue is not
about technological feasibility or even economics, it is about political will.