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Getting less viable economically all the time (AFP Photo/Ina FASSBENDER) |
Paris (AFP) - Renewable energy such as wind and solar projects are already cheaper to build than it is to continue operating 40 percent of the world's existing coal fleet, according to analysis released Tuesday.
In a report
outlining how the world can phase out the most polluting fuel while powering an
economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, a group of experts said coal
had reached a financial "tipping point" making it uncompetitive in
most markets.
The authors
estimate that a third of the global coal fleet is already more costly to run
than it is to build new renewable power solutions, including battery storage.
That figure
is set to rise to 73 percent of the fleet by 2025, said the analysis, which
also found that replacing the entire coal fleet with clean energy could be done
at a net saving to the global economy as soon as 2022.
"A
faster transition from coal to clean energy is within our grasp, and we show
how to engineer that transition in ways that will save money for electricity
customers around the world while aiding a just transition for workers and
communities," said Paul Bodnar, managing director of the Rocky Mountain
think tank which co-produced the research.
The 2015
Paris climate deal enjoins nations to limit global warming to well below two
degrees Celsius (3.6 Farenheit) above pre-industrial temperatures through
sweeping emissions cuts.
The accord
strives for a safer heating cap of 1.5C.
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said that for the 1.5C goal to remain
in reach, global coal use must decline by 80 percent below 2010 levels by 2030.
The
analysis found that 81 percent of the European Union's coal fleet was already
uncompetitive today -- meaning that without state support the plants would
cease to be going concerns.
In China
that figure stands at 43 percent currently, rising to nearly 100 percent in
five years.
The report
did not take into account the environmental and health impacts of coal.
"Coal
power is quickly facing economic obsolescence, independent of carbon pricing
and air pollution policies," said Matt Gray, managing director and co-head
of power and utilities at the Carbon Tracker Initiative.
"Closing
coal capacity and replacing it with lower cost alternatives will not only save
consumers and taxpayers money, but could also play a major role in the upcoming
economic recovery."
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