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Renewables Continue Remarkable Growth

Renewables had another banner year in 2009, with policy, investment and market development activity across a spread of nations - as recorded in the REN21 Renewables 2010 Global Status Report.

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With 26,000 subscribers and a global readership in over 170 countries around the world, Renewable Energy World Magazine is targeted at those who make growth happen in renewable industries. Covering policy, technology, finance, markets and more, Renewable Energy World magazine covers all technologies and all markets. Published six times per year, a special Directory of Suppliers Issue is published in July/August which is distributed year round at key renewable energy events worldwide.

13 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 13
September 27, 2010
The article presents sobering news although it should not be a surprise, namely -"Meanwhile, leadership in manufacturing is shifting from Europe to Asia as countries like China, India and South Korea continue to increase their commitments to renewable energy. In 2009, firms in China produced 40% of the world's solar PV cell supply, 30% of the world's wind turbines (up from 10% in 2007), and 77% of the world's solar hot water collectors."
Poof, there goes the green jobs dream for the United States. Once again, we are letting manufacturing jobs go overseas and adding to the woes of an economy that is in serious trouble. Without manufacturing jobs, a nation cannot create wealth. China understands that and we do not.
Comment
2 of 13
September 29, 2010
Unfortunately most of this growth requires government subsidies and mandates. The current begging for a 15% ethanol mandate is a good example. Stop wind subsidies and the wind business goes as quiet as those turbines on a sultry summer day when all AC is running and there isn't a "breath of air".
Comment
3 of 13
September 29, 2010
Unfortunately the naysayers, such as Mr. rolf-westgard-67277, have a very strong influence in hindering the development of alternate energy. Alternate clean energy will eventually become our primary source of energy. The only question being, do we implement its development now, and perhaps pay a little more and make a smooth transition or do we wait untill we run out of fossil fuels and watch the worlds economies, including our own, come tumbling down on our heads, in which case, we start from scratch. The Rush Limbaughs and Glen Becks, along with Big Oil, seem to prefer the latter!
Comment
4 of 13
September 29, 2010
" Unfortunately most of this growth requires government subsidies and mandates. The current begging for a 15% ethanol mandate is a good example. Stop wind subsidies and the wind business goes as quiet as those turbines on a sultry summer day when all AC is running and there isn't a "breath of air". "

Well, my home thermal water heating panels are doing great in such conditions, as are my home solar PV powering my heating/cooling ground heat pump, keeping my home powered and cool in summer, until the breeze starts blowing at nightfall, and I can switch to 100% RE grid supplied electricity using 52% locally grown switchgrass + liquid biofuel biomass, 38% wind turbines, and some biodigester methane producing gasturbines converting agro + municipal bio wastes into electricity . . . google 'ecopower cvba'

http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2009/10/fossil-fuels-subsidies-more-than-doubles-those-for-renewables
Fossil Fuel Subsidies More Than Double Those for Renewables. More than half the subsidies for renewables—$16.8 billion—are attributable to corn-based ethanol. Of the fossil fuel subsidies, $70.2 billion went to traditional sources—such as coal and oil—and $2.3 billion went to carbon capture and storage.
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Comment
5 of 13
Anonymous
September 29, 2010
The authors' definition of "tipping point" seems to be nonstandard. They claim that renewables supplied 18% of electricity in 2009, but that is almost certainly LOWER than it was the year before because hydropower (where the vast majority of renewable resources come from) is growing much more slowly than coal and natural gas generation. When the market share of fossil fuels declines year over year we might be at a tipping point, but that is a long way off.
Steven
Comment
6 of 13
September 29, 2010
I note a-b's comment with interest. I'm not sure if there is much way to track what people are doing sort of under the radar. I would like to see REW solicit some postings on this. I confess to buying in to gloom more than I would like to, and I would like to hear more from advanced individual adopters. As things work out for the advance people, small schools and others may want to play with their data sets and their hardware.
Comment
7 of 13
September 29, 2010
RE the anonymous post above comment number 5

The market share of fossil fuels is declining year over year as renewables market share increases. In the UK over the period 2007 to 2009 total energy consumption has dropped by about 7.1% and at the same time the percentage of total energy from renewables has gone up from 0.74% to 1.38%

Some of the drop will be due to reduced economic activity but some will be due to doing things more efficently. For example new cars with better fuel consumption, the change from tungsten to compact flurecent lighting, better home insulation standards and programs to bring older houses up to the new standards.

The percentage of electricity from renewables is much higher.

Data is from the Digest of UK Energy Statistics which is avaialbe on the DECC web site
http://decc.gov.uk/en/content/cms/statistics/publications/publications.aspx
Comment
8 of 13
September 29, 2010
On a seperate point I remember reading some where that UK coal production peaked in 1910. 100 years ago. Back in the 1970s we were taught at school that the UK had 200 years of coal left. 30 to 35 years later most of it is still in the ground. Much of its too expensive to dig up at todays prices, so we import coal from else where.
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Comment
9 of 13
Anonymous
September 29, 2010
Martin writes in comment #7: "The market share of fossil fuels is declining year over year as renewables market share increases"

In support of this claim he quotes UK energy usage statistics. However, the UK usage is a small percentage of world usage. In China, India, and many other places the market share of fossil fuels is INCREASING year over year. These large markets dominate the market changes on a world-wide basis and the net result is that the percentages of renewable generation is actually declining (hydro power used to contribute above 20% of world electricity by itself until fairly recently). Total generation from renewables is increasing at a significant pace but fossil fuel usage is exceeding this pace. This isn't what I'd call a tipping point.
Steven
Comment
10 of 13
September 30, 2010
mary-saunders,

I think I qualify a one of the 'under-the-radar' adopters. I put up a PV system on my house this year without any subsidies or FIT. At 5% depreciation and 2% interest it will produce electricity at a cost of around € 0.22 per kWh, equal to the consumer price here in The Netherlands. For consumers in countries with high insolation and/or high energy taxes, PV has reached grid parity.

But the 'under-the-radar' segment a very small. I am an exception. There are very few people doing what I did because it is a long term investment. Most people spend their money on short term things.
Comment
11 of 13
September 30, 2010
Avanderbom, I am interested in what kind of system you put in. Is it isolated from the grid and dedicated to a process with predictable draw-down, such as powering an EV?

Do you have battery storage such as they use at the Earthships in New Mexico, an interesting hot-bed of no-grid-connection fervor, or do you just use an EV or pluggable hybrid for storage?

The Earthships are wonderful, the only drawback for somebody like me is how far out of town they are. On the other hand, if their own generation can power an EV in and back to Taos, that's not a bad deal for someone who commutes and wants a definitive difference between work and home.

Another example of this is Northern California wineries with floating PV for water-quality testing and ph adjustment.

I like town; I can't help it. I just wish we could be as out-there and experimental in town, especially now while I am contemplating the down side of gas (having to have CO monitoring in your house, which I don't yet). Living in an earthquake zone is another interesting topic to ponder when one uses gas.

It seems you have to be connected to the Borg or with the Resistance, for now, if you live in town.

A certain segment of the population will spend on long-term investment. When more practical details are out there, a trend can accelerate. The people I know who have solar systems like to track what they do and talk about it with other sun geeks, which is cheap for entertainment, especially if you are in town.

Enough sales copy gets people to spend on nail polish, high-fructose corn syrup, and horror movies.

The incentives to smarten up are a harder sell, but there's a largely untapped niche anticipating the peak part of the bell curve.
Comment
12 of 13
October 3, 2010
"Unfortunately most of this growth requires government subsidies and mandates"

I hear this all the time, but these people never seem to have a problem with spending trillions of military dollars to police the oil supply and then debt finance another billion dollars per day on top of that to import oil and fund both sides of the "war on terror". And where does this guy think new jobs are going to come from? Buying plastic trash at Wal-mart on credit so we can "increase consumption" to stimulate the economy.
Comment
13 of 13
April 2, 2011
Excellent information on Renewable Energy and its growth around the world. Very useful to Researchers like me.

Dr.A.Jagadeesh Nellore(AP),India
Wind Energy Expert
E-mail: anumakonda.jagadeesh@gmail.com
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ISSUE COVER IMAGE: About Renewable Energy World

With over 50,000 subscribers and a global readership in 174 countries around the world, Renewable Energy World Magazine covers industry, policy, technology, finance and markets for all renewable technologies. Content is aimed ... more »

 

David Appleyard

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About: David Appleyard is Chief Editor of Renewable Energy World. He also currently holds the position of Chief Editor for sister publication Hydro Review Worldwide.... more »

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