March 19, 2024

Agency recommends $131 trillion investment in clean energy to avert catastrophic climate change

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Agency recommends $131 trillion investment in clean energy to avert catastrophic climate change

Agency recommends $131 trillion investment in clean energy to avert catastrophic climate change

Oredola Adeola

The International Renewable Energy Agency, IREA, has called for increase in planned investment in clean energy in about 30 per cent amounting to a total of $131 trillion by 2050 to avert catastrophic climate change.The IREA’s report suggested urgent need the world to massively scale up hydrogen production particularly acute.

In its annual flagship report, IREA, underscored the scale and pace of change needed to cap the rise in average global temperatures at 1.5 degrees Celsius, in line with the 2015 Paris climate accord.

“The gap between where we are and where we should be is not decreasing but widening,” said Francesco La Camera, director-general of the Abu Dhabi-based organisation, which has more than 160 member states.

“We need a drastic acceleration of energy transitions to make a meaningful turnaround.

”The agency’s “1.5C pathway” set out in the report found that fossil fuel consumption would have to fall by more than 75 per cent by 2050, with oil and coal shrinking more quickly.It further suggested that the use of natural gas would have to peak in 2025, although it would be the dominant fossil fuel by mid-century.

Adding that the renewable power capacity will have to expand more than ten-fold by mid-century, accompanied by a 30-fold increase in the electrification of transport, the report found.

The Agency further foresaw a dramatic increase in the production and use of “green hydrogen” – a zero-carbon fuel made by electrolysis, using power from wind and solar, that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen.

According to it, “By 2050, 30 per cent of electricity use will be dedicated to producing green hydrogen and hydrogen and its derivatives, such as e-ammonia and e-methanol, the report said.”To produce this, global electrolyser capacity will need to expand to almost 5,000 Gigawatts from 0.3 GW today.

“The report said governments could still harness post-pandemic recovery packages, which have so far mostly favoured fossil fuels, to accelerate the transition.

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