IEA: Renewables will be world’s second-largest energy source by 2018
Ars Technica » Scientific Method 2013-06-29
The International Energy Agency's latest annual Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report was released this week, and according to current trends, renewable energy sources will collectively overtake gas as the world's second-largest source of energy by the end of this decade.
Renewables—hydro, solar, geothermal, biofuel, and wind—are the fastest-growing energy sector, and an estimated increase in generation capacity of 40 percent over the next five years will mean that by 2018, a quarter of all energy generated globally will come from one of these sources. The majority of that amount—17 percent—will come from hydropower.
The two main reasons for this are cost and deployment—basically, it's getting cheaper to generate power with renewables, and they're being rolled out in new places. Developing countries are choosing renewables over fossil fuel or nuclear power generation as their total electricity demand increases, while the continually dropping cost of wind and solar—combined with subsidies—is making it cheaper to roll them out in developed nations.
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