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IEA Shoutout: Nukes, Renewables, Energy Efficiency Key to Climate Change Battle

By Kirsten Korosec | Nov 11, 2009

The world — in the eyes of the International Energy Agency — cannot resume its trip down the same fossil fuel path.

Instead, the Paris-based agency, which released Tuesday its 2009 World Energy Outlook, called for a profound change within the energy sector and a global agreement to limit the long-term concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to 450 parts per million of carbon-dioxide equivalent.

BNET Energy already wrote about the IEA’s embrace of natural gas as a bridge fuel. But there were several other energy sources touted by the agency.

The IEA gives a robust shout out to energy efficiency, renewable and nuclear energy as well as a cap-and-trade system, where carbon is priced at $50 per ton. Under that scenario, which includes an additional investment of $10.5 trillion through 2030 and a global agreement at the climate summit on Copenhagen, the 450 ppm scenario can be reached.

The IEA projects energy demand will rise about 40 percent by 2030 compared to 2007 levels — the vast majority of which will come from developing countries such as China and India. World electricity demand is projected to grow at a 2.5 percent rate each year through 2030, with coal being the go-to fuel of the power sector.

Meeting the IEA’s projected energy demand will cost $26 trillion — equal to 1.4 percent of global gross domestic product per year on average. And all of this means, more emissions and an increase in global temps, the IEA said.

So, the answer?

It’s not cheap. Remember the $10.5 trillion investment number?

It’s also complicated.

It will require virtually every country’s participation and an investment in alternative energy sources, the IEA said. 

Developed countries such as the U.S. and Europe will have to carry much of the burden and invest $200 billion by 2020into emission-reduction and clean energy projects in developing countries like India, IEA’s chief economist Fatih Birol said during a Tuesday press conference. That’s on top of what these developed countries spend at home to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The outlook for the do-nothing approach isn’t much cheaper. Each year of delay will add $500 billion to mitigation costs between today and 2030, the IEA said. 

Plus, the investment, the IEA contends, will be more than offset by cheaper fuel bills. Oh, and the avoidance of devastating consequences related to climate change.

Here are IEA’s go-to solutions. The emissions reduction figures are based on the IEA’s 450 ppm scenario.

  1. Energy efficiency would make the largest dent in emissions with a 57 percent reduction by 2030. The U.S. and China together could reduce global power-sector emissions by half.
  2. Renewable energy and biofuels would reduce emissions by 23 percent by 2030.
  3. Nuclear energy reduce emission 10 percent by 2030. Birol says nuclear will play a “crucial role.”
  4. Improvements in fuel economy and new vehicle technologies like hybrid and electric vehicles.
  5. Carbon capture and storage also makes the list and could represent 10 percent of total emissions savings in 2030, relative to the IEA primary scenario.

See additional IEA 2009 World Energy Outlook coverage:

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

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    verycold

    11/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: IEA Shoutout: Nukes, Renewables, Energy Efficiency Key to Climate Change Battle

    Once again we are ignoring the daily inefficiencies that lead to energy waste. When this economic crisis began, I wrote several letters to my congressmen to consider a massive plan in the US to rid us of our old appliances, furnaces, windows, roofs, etc. I know a bit about this having rehabbed many homes in my life, and recently doing an upgrade on my own property to take advantage of the 1500 energy credit. That credit was the right direction, but WAY TOO SMALL. Just looking around our town I would say the vast majority of homes are massively leaking energy. I love old, having grown up in a house built in 1690, but I like energy efficient old. I don't want to see wind blowing across my living room.

    Let's compare old dryers and new ones. If you own a front loader washer, which is amazingly more efficient that top loaders, the clothes come out so dry it is sometimes hard to know if they have been washed. Ergo, much less drying time no matter what dryer you own. Imagine across the country if everybody now owned a front loader machine. They are more costly, but the price would come down if more were sold. Recently I heard that just changing the dial setting on the washer from hot/cold to warm/cold reduces energy cost by 80 percent.

    The waste of existing energy is IMO huge and could easily be reduced by educating the population and replacing the JUNK. I know that the 1500 energy credit helped the insulation companies because I had them insulate my garage this fall. They were extremely busy because of that credit. The difference in my garage and thus my home since the insulation was blown above my home as well, has made a huge difference.

    Without getting into the global warming debate and its accuracies, how about instead begin by drastically improving what we have. I have hundreds of easy solutions that might cost money, but will have a huge bang for the buck and long term improve everybody's lives.

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