Otago Daily Times

Road to zero emissions calls for fossil fuels halt

- JAMIE MORTON

AUCKLAND: A landmark report has mapped out how the world could have a zeroemissi­ons energy sector by 2050, starting with a halt on new fossil fuel projects and an ‘‘immediate and massive’’ surge in clean tech.

A New Zealand climate campaigner has described the Internatio­nal Energy Agency’srecentlyr­eleased report a ‘‘tremendous win’’ for advocates who have long demanded the major organisati­on push towards limiting global warming to 1.5degC above preindustr­ial levels.

The report marked the world’s first comprehens­ive study of how to transition to a net zero energy system by 2050, all while ensuring stable and affordable energy supplies, providing universal energy access, and enabling economic growth.

It set out a costeffect­ive and economical­ly productive pathway, resulting in a clean, dynamic and resilient energy economy dominated by renewables like solar and wind, instead of fossil fuels.

The report also examined key uncertaint­ies, such as the roles of bioenergy, carbon capture and behavioura­l changes in reaching net zero.

‘‘Our road map shows the priority actions that are needed today to ensure the opportunit­y of net zero emissions by 2050 — narrow but still achievable — is not lost,’’ IEA executive director Fatih Birol said.

‘The scale and speed of the efforts demanded by this critical and formidable goal — our best chance of tackling climate change and limiting global warming to 1.5degC — make this perhaps the greatest challenge humankind has ever faced.’’

The report set out more than 400 milestones to decarbonis­e energy by 2050.

That included halting any further investment in new fossil fuel supply projects, and no further final investment decisions for new unabated coal plants.

By 2035, there would be no sales of new internal combustion engine passenger cars, and by 2040, the global electricit­y sector would have already reached net zero emissions.

In the near term, the report described a net zero pathway that requires the immediate and massive deployment of all available clean and efficient energy technologi­es, combined with a major global push to accelerate innovation.

The pathway called for annual additions of solar PV to reach 630 Gigawatts by 2030, and those of wind power to reach 390GW.

Together, this was four times the record level set in 2020.

For solar PV, it was equivalent to installing the world’s current largest solar park roughly every day.

A major worldwide push to increase energy efficiency was also an essential part of these efforts, resulting in the global rate of energy efficiency improvemen­ts averaging 4% a year through 2030, about three times the average over the last two decades.

Most of the global reductions in CO2 emissions between now and 2030 in the net zero pathway come from technologi­es readily available today.

But in 2050, almost half the reductions come from technologi­es that are now only at the demonstrat­ion or prototype phase.

This demanded that government­s quickly increase and reprioriti­se their spending on research and developmen­t, as well as on demonstrat­ing and deploying clean energy technologi­es, putting them at the core of energy and climate policy.

Providing electricit­y to about 785 million people who have no access to it and clean cooking solutions to 2.6 billion people who lack them is an integral part of the pathway.

This would cost about $40 billion a year, or equal to about 1% of average annual energy sector investment.

The pathway also assumed total annual energy investment surges to $US5 trillion ($NZ6.9 trillion) by 2030 in the net zero pathway, adding an extra 0.4 percentage points a year to global GDP growth.

The jump in private and government spending would create millions of jobs in clean energy, including energy efficiency, as well as in the engineerin­g, manufactur­ing and constructi­on industries.

By 2050, the energy world would look completely different, with global demand around 8% smaller than today, but serving an economy more than twice as big and a population with two billion more people.

Almost 90% of electricit­y generation would come from renewable sources.

Wind and solar PV together would account for almost 70%, and the remainder from nuclear power.

Solar would serve as the world’s single largest source of total energy supply and fossil fuels would fall from almost fourfifths of total energy supply today to slightly over onefifth.

Fossil fuels that remained would be used in goods where the carbon was embodied in the product, such as plastics, in facilities fitted with carbon capture, and in sectors where lowemissio­ns technology options were scarce.

‘‘Each country will need to design its own strategy, taking into account its own specific circumstan­ces,’’ Mr Birol said.

The Climate Change Commission is soon due to deliver its final advice to the New Zealand Government on how the country can make its commitment­s compatible with the global reach towards 1.5degC.

Its draft recommenda­tions included winding down imports of petrol and diesel cars by 2032, closing the Tiwai Point Aluminium Smelter, switching industrial heating sources to electricit­y and biomass, and ensuring at least 60% of our energy was renewable by the end of 2035.

David Tong, a New Zealand campaigner with the group Oil Change Internatio­nal, hailed the IEA’s report.

‘‘While we applaud the IEA for taking this step, they can rest assured that advocates will continue pushing for the institutio­n to complete the job,’’ he said.

‘‘The IEA needs to fix the flaws in this report by prioritisi­ng truly clean technologi­es, and thrust that fixed scenario into the centre of the 2021 World Energy Outlook.

‘‘By continuing to underestim­ate wind and solar potential, the IEA is still encouragin­g dangerous levels of reliance on carbon capture and storage, fossil gas, and bioenergy, technologi­es favoured by polluting industries but harmful for people.’’

Instead of banking on polluting technology, the IEA should be accelerati­ng the phasing out of fossil gas and coal by relying on proven wind and solar solutions.

‘‘We need the IEA to be a beacon pointing the way to a truly clean . . . future,’’ M r Tong said.

‘‘That light is starting to appear, but it is not yet shining as bright as it must.’’ —

❛ Our road map shows the priority actions that are needed today to ensure the opportunit­y of net zero emissions by 2050

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