The Great Transition to Renewable Energy

The global transition to clean, renewable energy and away from nuclear and
fossils is well under way, with remarkable developments happening every
day.
The Great Transition by Lester Brown, Janet Larsen, Matt
Roney, and Emily Adams lays out a tremendous range of these developments
– here are seven that may surprise you.
1. Solar is now so cheap that global adoption appears unstoppable.
See more solar power facts
here.
2. Wind power adoption is rapidly altering energy portfolios around the world.
Over
the past decade, world wind power capacity grew more than 20 percent a
year, its increase driven by its many attractive features, by public
policies supporting its expansion, and by falling costs.
By
the end of 2014, global wind generating capacity totaled 369,000
megawatts, enough to power more than 90 million U.S. homes. Wind
currently has a big lead on solar PV, which has enough worldwide
capacity to power roughly 30 million U.S. homes.
See more wind power facts
here.
3. National and subnational energy policies are promoting renewables, and many geographies are considering a price on carbon.
But
by the start of 2014, some 70 countries, including many in Europe, were
using feed-in tariffs to encourage investment in renewables.
See more energy policy facts
here.
4. The financial sector is embracing renewables – and starting to turn against fossils and nuclear.
In
January 2013, Warren Buffett gave solar energy a huge financial boost
when his MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company announced an investment of
up to $2.5 billion in California in what is now known as the Solar Star
project. At 580 megawatts, it will become the world’s largest PV project
when complete in late 2015. MidAmerican had earlier bought the Topaz
solar farm in California, now tied with Desert Sunlight, another
California project, as the world’s largest at 550 megawatts. As of its
completion in late 2014, Topaz can generate enough electricity to power
180,000 California homes.
See more financial sector facts
here.
5. Coal use is in decline in the United States and will likely fall at the global level far sooner than once thought possible.
Major
U.S. coal producers, such as Peabody Energy and Arch Coal, have seen
their market values drop by 61 and 94 percent, respectively, as of
September 2014.
See more coal facts
here.
6. Transportation will move away from oil as electric vehicle fleets expand rapidly and bike- and car-sharing spreads.
Bike-sharing
programs have sprung up worldwide in recent years. More than 800 cities
in 56 countries now have fully operational bike-share programs, with
over 1 million bikes. In the United States, by the end of 2012 some 21
cities had 8,500 bikes in bike-share racks. By the end of 2016, this is
expected to climb to over 70 cities with close to 40,000 bikes.
See more transportation facts
here.
7. Nuclear is on the rocks thanks to rising costs and widespread safety concerns.
See more nuclear facts
here.
Chapter 1 of
The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy is available online at
www.earth-policy.org/books/tgt.
Supporting data and a PowerPoint summary presentation are also available for free downloading.