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Solar could meet 26 percent global energy demand by 2040
2001.10.18
source: http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/12857/story.htm
FRANKFURT - Solar power could cover a quarter of global energy
demand in 2040, over 9,000 terawatt hours (TWh), a new report by
Greenpeace and the
European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA) said yesterday.
Solar power is seen as a way to help combat climate change, provide
easier electricity access to the world's poor and give greater energy
security and
independence than fossil fuels can. "It's a realistic, acievable
goal, based on the current state of the industry and opportunities
in the market, but it requires clear political support from governments
around the world," Sven Teske, energy expert with environmental
group Greenpeace's German branch, said in a statement. "In
particular, the European Commission must ensure that innovative
national incentive schemes for solar electricity are not invalidated
on competition grounds,"
he added.
Germany is global number three after Japan and the U.S. in terms
of installed capacity of photovolatic technology, which is designed
to convert sunlight into
electricity. Its solar sector, which provides less than one percent
of the nation's power, depends on government support schemes for
renewable energies currently being reviewed by the EC.
The
Solar Generation report is published as part of the global Choose
Positive Energy campaign. That campaign asks governments to provide
renewable energy - from solar, wind and hydro energy - to two billion
of the world's poorest people in the next decade. The report projects
an average photovolatic market growth rate of 30 percent up to 2020
and 15 percent between 2020-2040. The International Energy Agency
forecasts that global energy demand will rise to 27,000 TWh in 2020,
and 35,000 TWh in 2040. "If by 2020 global solar output reached
276 TWh, it would replace 75 new coal-fired power stations, saving
664 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions," the report
said. By then, the global solar infrastructure would have an investment
value of $75 billion a year, it added.
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