[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Families Are Fascist

"Operation Gladio is Alive and Well" NATO"s secret terrorist army EXPOSED

White Swan Collapse Underway: Ed Dowd Warns 50% Stock Crash

To Kill An Operation Mockingbird: Tulsi Goes To War With The CIA's Propaganda Yobbos

Huge Drug And Weapons Haul In French Polynesia Echoes Kash Patel's Warnings

⚠️ALERT: TRUMP HAS ACTIVATED 11.3 – Law Of War Manual

IDF Soldier: “We Were ORDERED To Stand Down On October 7th!”

Michael Snyder: The New York Declaration” Could Potentially Change Everything

Hillary Clinton calls for the repeal of Section 230 so that platforms can moderate Americans' speech.

Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans - Outrage AI Parody Song

Alarming Seismic Instability Along The East Coast, The New Madrid Fault Zone And The West Coast

Whitney Webb: "What's Happening Is Deeper Than Blackmail"

Matt Taibbi: The New York Times Can't Stop Sucking

Canada is now an Anti-Christian Country? When did this happen?

Dr Horse Predicts Food Prices Might Double in 2026

Krasheninnikov Volcano Erupts for the First Time in 600 Years — and It May Be Linkd to a Massive Earthquake

Shocking Chart Exposes America's "Civilizational Crisis"; A Nation In Freefall Without Immediate Course Correction

Watch: Sydney Sweeney Goes 'John Wick-Style' With Handgun

Sen. Blackburn To Introduce Bills To Root Out 'Embedded' Foreign Interest

China Builds a Gold-Based Alternative to the Dollar System, Modeled on Dollar Architecture

Why the U.S. Buys So Much Nuclear Fuel From Russia | WSJ

Orbán Says Hungary, Poland, Slovakia & Czechs Can Block EU Budget With United Front

What if you drink Water at Night?

Since 2/2021 we have added 5.89 million to this survey which is 19.6% growth. Disaster!

Trump Admin Saves Jobs, Kicks 1500 Non-English-Speaking Truckers Off the Road

Indians & Nepalese Are The World's Most Voracious Mobile Data Users

Doc's favorite movie when we were kids...

Fauci Meme

Hey Horse!

Ukrainian Front Collapsing With Fortresses Falling One By One


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: This is the end of the fossil fuel age as we know it, says report
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.sciencealert.com/this-is ... -age-as-we-know-it-says-report
Published: Jun 16, 2016
Author: BEC CREW
Post Date: 2016-06-16 08:36:35 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 253
Comments: 2

ScienceAlert...

Fossil fuels are holding on, but end of their reign is nigh, says a new report from Bloomberg New Energy Finance, which predicts that wind and solar will be cheaper than coal and gas generators by 2027, and electric vehicles could make up 25 percent of the global car fleet by 2040.

The peak year for coal, gas, and oil looks to be 2025, and then it’s all downhill from there. For big oil guys, at least. "You can't fight the future," says lead researcher, Seb Henbest. "The economics are increasingly locked in."

Released on Monday, Bloomberg’s New Energy Outlook report has found that US$11.4 trillion will be invested in new energy sources over the next 25 years, and two thirds of that will go towards renewables, particularly wind and solar.

Any new coal plants will mostly be cropping up in India and other emerging markets in Asia.

The report explains:

"Cheaper coal and cheaper gas will not derail the transformation and decarbonisation of the world’s power systems. By 2040, zero-emission energy sources will make up 60 percent of installed capacity.

Wind and solar will account for 64 percent of the 8.6TW [1 Terawatt = 1,000 Gigawatts] of new power generating capacity added worldwide over the next 25 years, and for almost 60 percent of the $11.4 trillion invested."

The report predicts that coal, gas, and oil will peak by 2025, and will hit its final decline even sooner than that, concluding that, "coal and gas will begin their terminal decline in less than a decade".

By 2027, the real tipping point will occur, when fossil fuels will be well and truly on the decline and renewables have been established long enough that they’ll likely be generating energy more cheaply than existing coal, gas, and oil refineries. And there’s nothing quite like a cheaper price to accelerate an industry even further.

Let's just take a moment and think about that for a second. For the first time since humanity fell in love with producing crazy amounts of energy to give us such luxuries as cars, electricity, industrial-level food production, and overseas vacations, we've figured out how to do it without stomping all over the environment in the process.

We're not there yet, but the writing is well and truly on the wall, and that's a pretty phenomenal achievement by researchers all over the world who have been working their butts off to make renewable technologies viable on a massive scale - even more viable than fossil fuels.

But here's the bad news. For as promising as the rise of renewables and the fall of fossil fuels is, Bloomberg's report says their projections won't be enough to limit the global warming increase of 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) that was targeted by the 2015 Paris Climate Conference.

"Some US$7.8 trillion will be invested globally in renewables between 2016 and 2040, two-thirds of the investment in all power generating capacity, but it would require trillions more to bring world emissions onto a track compatible with the United Nations 2 degrees Celsius climate target," says Henbest.

According to Andrew Freedman at Mashable, to meet what everyone agreed needed to happen at the Paris Conference, an additional US$5.3 trillion in new clean energy investment would need to be invested worldwide in the next 25 years.

Below are some more insights from the report:

Coal and gas prices will stay low. Wind and solar costs fall sharply. An electric car boom is expected, and will likely represent 35 percent of worldwide new light-duty vehicle sales in 2040 - which is 90 times the 2015 figure - and 25 percent of the global car fleet overall. Small-scale battery storage will become a US$250 billion market to enable more residential and commercial solar systems. India, not China, will be the key to the future global emissions trend, with its electricity demand forecast to grow 3.8 times between 2016 and 2040. Renewables will dominate in Europe, and overtake gas in the US.

You can access the report online here:

www.bloomberg.com/company/new-energy-outlook/

To be clear, these are just very educated predictions based on government and industry spending, so none of this is set in stone. But experts have been predicting the end of the fossil fuel era for years now, and we're probably going to see it within our lifetime. What an awesome thing to look forward to.


Poster Comment:

Solar and wind need to be coupled with further development of hydro, including mini hydro in creeks and other streams.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

Fossil fuels are holding on, but end of their reign is nigh, says a new report from Bloomberg New Energy Finance, which predicts that wind and solar will be cheaper than coal and gas generators by 2027,

Utter nonsense.

In ten years??? Only a fool would say such, only an idiot would believe the fool.

Cynicom  posted on  2016-06-16   9:46:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

There is more oil - which is biotic - in the world then we will ever need.

"Have Brain, Will Travel

Turtle  posted on  2016-06-16   11:02:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]