In a promising development for climate advocates, the global electricity sector is on the brink of a significant turning point, with carbon emissions poised to peak this year, following a plateau in the first half of 2023. This transformation can be attributed to the remarkable surge in wind and solar power, as highlighted in a recent report by the climate thinktank Ember.
The report, which examined global electricity generation trends, underscores the astonishing pace at which renewables are advancing. This progress aligns closely with the rapid expansion required to meet the ambitious 1.5C pathway goal by tripling capacity before the decade’s end, as emphasized by experts.
Comparing data from January to June 2023 to the corresponding period in the previous year across 78 countries representing 92% of global electricity demand, Ember’s senior electricity analyst and lead author of the report, Malgorzata Wiatros-Motyka, stated, “It’s still hanging in the balance if 2023 will see a fall in power-sector emissions.”
These findings strongly suggest that the world is nearing the peak of carbon emissions from the global power sector, with the potential for emissions to decline in line with global climate targets. To achieve this, Wiatros-Motyka emphasized the urgency of securing a global agreement to triple renewable energy capacity this decade, marking it as the “single biggest action that governments can take” to align with the 1.5C pathway.
The report revealed that global power-sector emissions experienced a modest 0.2% increase in the first half of this year compared to the same period last year. However, it also highlighted that wind and solar power’s combined contribution to global electricity rose to an impressive 14.3%, up from 12.8% the previous year. Solar power, in particular, witnessed a remarkable 16% growth in the first half of the year compared to the same period in 2022, thanks to 50 countries setting new monthly records for solar generation.
The imperative to achieve net-zero carbon emissions from electricity generation globally by 2045, and by 2035 in advanced economies, in line with the Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5C, was underscored by modeling from the International Energy Agency (IEA). The IEA’s influential net-zero roadmap indicates that solar and wind power must increase their combined share from 12% in the previous year to 40% by 2030 to remain on track. Achieving this requires a tripling of global renewable capacity by the decade’s end, necessitating a 26% annual growth rate for solar power and a 16% annual growth rate for wind power.
In the backdrop of these developments, fossil fuels faced resistance due to a global slowdown in electricity demand growth. The report revealed that global electricity demand increased by a mere 0.4% in the first half of 2023 compared to the same period in the previous year, significantly below the 10-year average of 2.6% that preceded it.
This promising shift towards renewable energy offers hope in the fight against climate change, highlighting the crucial role of wind and solar power in reshaping the global energy landscape. As the world teeters on the precipice of a historic emissions peak, securing a commitment to bolster renewable capacity becomes imperative to safeguard our climate future.