The bad
The world is currently heading for a 2.4 degrees Celsius warmer planet (instead of the somewhat safer 1.5 degrees Celsius). Such an increase will lead to catastrophic consequences around the globe, from extreme weather events to the disappearance of inhabited islands. And while oil and gas demand is projected to peak this decade, demand will remain at unacceptably high levels due to the need for aviation and shipping fuels, as well as growing demand in emerging market and developing economies.
While solar panel manufacturing capacity is looking on track, forecasts show the installation of solar is too slow. Right now, only 40 per cent of solar panels being manufactured are being installed. This oversupply is pushing prices down but if this rate of utilisation does not increase to 70 per cent by 2030, there will not be enough energy being produced by solar panels to reach net zero.
The report states the growth in electric vehicle (EV) sales is increasing enough to achieve net zero, forecasting two-thirds of vehicles sold by 2030 to be EVs. But China is the largest manufacturer, and the United States has already imposed import tariffs on Chinese-made EVs in an attempt to protect its domestic car industry. Uptake of EVs might slow enough to derail net zero if the European Union follows suit.
Renewable energy technologies require rare earth minerals. Projections suggest these are not being extracted fast enough to keep up with renewable technology production despite increases in critical mineral capital investment and exploration surveys. Without a significant expansion of critical mineral production capabilities and mined deposits, renewable energy technology inputs will not keep up with the demand to reach net zero.
The ugly
A pressing concern in the report is that renewable energy technology supply chains are more concentrated than other typical supply chains. China has driven much of this concentration with massive state-led investments, capturing large parts of the critical minerals, solar panel and EV industries, including EV batteries. Illustrating this, four countries – Vietnam, India, Malaysia and Thailand – have a 13 per cent share in global solar panel manufacturing. China has about 80 per cent.
Concentrated supply chains are more vulnerable to shocks. The report notes interruption of these supply chains either by geopolitical tensions, disasters or conflict could jeopardise progress towards net zero. Unfortunately, the willingness of China to restrict trade of critical minerals, and US import tariffs on electric vehicles and solar panels that are made in China demonstrate how an increasingly fragmented world is already endangering limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
The International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook this year has provided a crucial present-day stocktake of progress towards the clean energy transition. Reaching net zero is possible but many challenges are ahead. Given geoeconomic competition has infiltrated renewable energy technologies, the report reads as a stern warning for global leaders: coordinated global investment and trade in renewable energy technologies is how the global community moves towards limiting global warming to only 1.5 degrees Celsius. Don’t jeopardise it.
Quote from:https://..........org/the-interpreter/world-energy-outlook-good-bad-ugly