La Camera and Douglas | Only public-private cooperation can accelerate decarbonisation

5 months ago 31

As countries around the world experienced record temperatures last year, United Nations Secretary General António Guterres declared: “We must turn a year of burning heat into a year of burning ambition.”

But to move away from fossil fuels and unlock the green transition’s economic benefits, such as job creation and universal access to clean energy, industry leaders and policymakers must work together to translate the commitments made at COP 28, the UN Climate Change Conference, into actual renewable gigawatts.

COP28 held in Dubai marked a historic turning point in the battle against climate change. Rallying around the UAE Consensus, world leaders pledged to move away from fossil fuels, agreeing to triple renewable power capacity to at least 11,000 gigawatts and double energy efficiency by 2030.

But ambition alone is not enough to achieve these targets and limit global warming to 1.5° Celsius. Governments must invest in mature, cost-competitive renewable technologies that can be rapidly deployed at scale. When integrated with long-duration energy storage, green hydrogen, and system optimisation, these technologies represent the most reliable and flexible way to accelerate the energy transition.

Renewables, undoubtedly, will shape the global energy landscape in the coming years. Both solar and wind power are expected to grow significantly, with hydropower serving as the backbone of grid flexibility. Consequently, renewables are poised to become the twenty-first century’s dominant source of global electricity.

But as a joint report released by IRENA, the International Renewable Energy Agency, and the Global Renewables Alliance (GRA), ahead of COP28 noted, tripling renewable capacity will require cooperation between the private and public sectors. Partnerships should focus on initiatives that deliver immediate results, such as mobilising low-cost financing, accelerating permitting processes, clearing grid connection backlogs, reforming government auction mechanisms for renewable energy projects, and diversifying global supply chains.

A strong commitment to inclusivity and the active participation of developing economies must be at the heart of these efforts. IRENA and GRA are demonstrating this commitment by collaborating on the annual reports commissioned by the COP28 presidency to monitor progress towards the global tripling target and facilitate the energy transition.

We must, however, move faster, especially if we aim to ensure that progress is equitably distributed around the world. While renewable power capacity rose by 473 gigawatts in 2023, the economic benefits of the energy transition did not reach every country. Remarkably, 83 per cent of these increases were concentrated in China, the European Union, and the United States, leaving many countries in the Global South behind.

In fact, the shift to renewables is alarmingly slow in many parts of the world. Opportunities to address development and access challenges in Sub-Saharan Africa, where more than 500 million people still lack access to electricity, are being squandered. This sluggish transition can be attributed largely to the lack of affordable financing, adequate planning, and the policy and market frameworks needed to support the adoption of renewable energy. Tellingly, public fossil-fuel subsidies reached US$1.3 trillion in 2022 – roughly the annual investment needed to triple renewable capacity by 2030.

A critical first step towards fostering greater public-private cooperation in pursuit of COP28’s ambitious targets is to reform the global financial architecture. Africa, for example, accounts for 17 per cent of the world’s population but has received less than two per cent of global investments in renewable energy over the past two decades, underscoring the need to reduce capital costs and attract private investors. Developing industrial clusters and initiating grant programmes could also help foster environments conducive to innovation and private-public partnerships.

Recent commitments by world leaders offer glimmers of hope. African leaders at the September 2023 Africa Climate Summit in Nairobi, for example, pledged to increase the continent’s renewable capacity to at least 300 gigawatts by 2030. This effort aims to reduce energy poverty and boost the global supply of cost-effective clean energy suitable for industrial use.

In the words of Kenyan President William Ruto, a key advocate of the Nairobi agreement, today’s energy crisis is “a wake-up call that fossil fuels are the opposite of freedom, yet the world has become shackled to them. We need to break free from those chains”.

To this end, Ruto established the Accelerated Partnership for Renewables in Africa, an African-led international alliance of governments and stakeholders that aims to accelerate renewable-energy deployment, increase access, promote green industrialisation, and strengthen economic and societal resilience.

Governments and business leaders should harness the current political momentum to foster cooperation between policymakers and private investors. As governments develop appropriate policy and market frameworks to facilitate the transition to renewables, the private sector – historically responsible for 86 per cent of global investments in renewable energy – is poised to lead the charge.

Together, we can achieve a clean, secure, and just energy future. But to realise this vision, we must act fast.

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Francesco La Camera is director-general of the International Renewable Energy Agency; Bruce Douglas is CEO of the Global Renewables Alliance.

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© Project Syndicate 2024

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