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Home » Uncategorized » Renewables ‘not replacing fossil fuels’
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Renewables ‘not replacing fossil fuels’

Eleanore RobinsonBy Eleanore RobinsonOctober 10, 20233 Mins Read
North America

Renewables are still just meeting increased demand for electricity rather than replacing fossil fuels, according to DNV’s Energy Transition Outlook

The report finds that between 2017-2022 fossil fuels met 51% of new energy demand, despite a rapid buildout of renewable capacity.

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Solar installations reached a record 250GW in 2022, according to the research.

Wind power will deliver 7% of global grid-connected electricity and installed capacity will double by 2030, despite inflationary and supply chain headwinds, DNV forecast.

However, in the near-term, transmission and distribution grid constraints are emerging as a key bottleneck for renewable electricity expansion and related distributed energy assets such as grid-connected storage and EV charging points in many regions, including in North America and Europe. 

Remi Eriksen, group president and chief executive of DNV, (pictured) said: “Globally, the energy transition has not started, if, by transition, we mean that clean energy replaces fossil energy in absolute terms.

“Clearly, the energy transition has begun at a sector, national, and community level, but globally, record emissions from fossil energy are on course to move even higher next year.”

Energy security has strengthened as a driver of energy policy due to changes in the geopolitical landscape. 

Governments are willing to pay a premium for locally sourced energy, which has had a notable impact on the Outlook’s results.

For example, the Indian Subcontinent is now forecast to transition slower with more coal in the energy mix.

In Europe the transition is accelerating with the alignment of climate, industrial and energy security objectives.  

Even if the transition is yet to get out of the starting blocks, once it starts renewables will outsprint fossil fuels, DNV said.   

From now, most energy additions are wind and solar, which grow 9-fold and 17-fold respectively between 2022 and 2050.

Electricity production will more than double between now and 2050, bringing efficiencies to the energy system, according to the report. 

The fossil to non-fossil split of the energy mix is currently 80/20 but this will move to a 48/52 split by mid-century.

Eriksen added: “There are short term set-backs due to increasing interest rates, supply chain challenges, and energy trade shifts due to the war in Ukraine, but the long-term trend for the energy transition remains clear: the world energy system will move from an energy mix that is 80% fossil based to one that is about 50% non-fossil based in the space of a single generation.

“This is fast, but not fast enough to meet the Paris goals.

“Ahead of COP 28, DNV will publish its ‘Pathway to Net Zero’ report, showing that technology is not the main challenge, but rather the incentives to drive fast deployment of renewables & storage and dis-incentives to drive down emissions from fossil fuel are lacking.”

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