We are in the
midst of an energy revolution
Financial markets are reflecting the growing value of renewables and
coming to terms with the declining value of fossil fuels.
Almost a
dozen stock exchanges around the world now require sustainability
risk disclosure from listed companies.
A
total of 2.6 trillion has been diverted from fossil fuels to date. Cities, investors and
even the Prince of Wales support the global
divestment movement. Independent of concerns about climate
change, investors are being forced to incorporate
the risks associated with hydrocarbons.
As a consequence,
we are seeing the lowest rate of discovery of new reserves in two decades.
The low price points for oil have also resulted in far less shale and tar
sands extraction.
In
contrast to the slowing rates of fossil fuel extraction, the growth of renewable
energy has been nothing short of spectacular. Buoyed by growing price
parity and advances in storage to manage variability, renewable
energy is thriving.
Clean
energy is seeing exponential growth. While growth projections for
renewable energy are high, in the last fifteen years, the growth rate for
renewables has consistently surpassed
projections.
In 2000, the International Energy Agency (IEA) made
predictions about the amount of solar that would be deployed in 2015,
however, the actual installed capacity was 18 times greater than the IEA’s
projections. On its own, China will add an astounding 18 gigawatts of new
solar capacity in 2015.
“[T]he sharp and unexpectedly steep decrease in prices for electricity produced from wind and solar and the demand destruction for fossil fuel energy from new efficiency improvements…We’ve seen a dramatic increase that’s far more rapid than anybody projected and it’s accelerating — not just in the United States but even more rapidly in developing countries.” Al Gore explained. “The pressure is only going to build as the price of renewable electricity continues to fall.”
There
are a number of factors undermining the demand for fossil
fuels and driving demand for renewables. Mindy Lubber, the President
of Ceres, expressed optimism about the future of renewables and cited
the launch of bonds to finance renewable energy projects. She also pointed
to market analyses that expose the risks associated with fossil
fuels:
“[T]he financial industry is waking up to the oil industry’s potentially wasteful spending on development of new fossil fuel reserves when global oil demand is weakening and carbon-reducing trends are taking stronger hold.” Lubber said. “Goldman Sachs found nearly $1 trillion of oil projects at risk due to shrinking demand and plummeting oil prices. Among the potential “zombie projects”: expensive Arctic oil, deepwater drilling and Canada’s oil sands.”
Although
fossil fuels continue to produce two-thirds of the energy we use, financial
markets are increasingly considering the actual risks and costs associated with
these dirty sources of energy.
As
reported by the Guardian, in 2013, renewables began to overtake
conventional fossil fuel and nuclear installations. It is no coincidence that
2013 was also the first year where we saw more renewable energy capacity
installed than fossil fuel power plants (143 gigawatts (GW) compared to
141GW). In the U.S., the cost of installed solar has dropped from $77/watt in
1977 to $0.60/watt today.
In
some markets today, renewables like solar are as cheap as
conventional energy. We are already seeing solar price parity with traditional
energy in states like Arizona, California and Texas. In the UK, the cost
of electricity produced by onshore wind farms is now cheaper than energy
derived from fossil fuels.
Hundreds
of millions of dollars are now being invested to advance the key issue of
renewable energy storage. This includes R&D from firms like Tesla, GE and
Lockheed Martin. According to Deutsche Bank, the costs of energy
storage will fall from about 14 cents per kilowatt-hour to about 2 cents
within the next five years.
There
will be more downward pressure on traditional energy from increasingly
stringent regulatory regimes. In the U.S., the EPA’s Clean Power
Plan will cut carbon emissions from power plants by 32
percent by 2030.
As
evidenced by support for the White House’s climate initiative called the American
Business Act on Climate Pledge, the business community is
also increasingly supporting action to reduce emissions,
grow renewables and cut fossil fuel pollution.
Optimism
about the future of renewables derives from the speed at
which innovation has occurred. This is the view of Johan
Rockström, an environmental science professor at Stockholm University and
executive director of the Stockholm Resilience Centre. His hope is
further buoyed by both the cost effectiveness of renewable
energy and its massive deployment.
“2015
stands out as a remarkable and dynamic year for climate and energy in the
United States.” The Environmental Defense
Fund said. “2015 is the year when we can truly say that our
national energy landscape began to change in tandem with climate awareness.”
As
explained by Jeremy Leggett, author of the book “Winning of the War on Carbon”,
we are seeing a ‘tipping point’ in the decline of fossil fuel industries.
He cites the declining cost of deploying renewable energy, the
increasing cost of hydrocarbons and the politics of climate
abatement.
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Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.
Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.