The
International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) said the
attractive prices of renewables relative to fossil fuel power
generation could help governments embrace green economic
recoveries from the shock of the coronavirus pandemic.
"We have reached an important turning point in the energy
transition," Francesco La Camera, director-general of IRENA,
said in a statement.
Although scientists say the world needs to stage a much faster
transition to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change, the
annual report by the Abu Dhabi-based agency shows that wind and
solar are increasingly competitive on price alone.
More than half of the renewable capacity added in 2019 achieved
lower power costs than the cheapest new coal plants, the report
found.
Auction results also suggest that the average cost of building
new solar photovoltaic (PV) and onshore wind power now costs
less than keeping many existing coal plants running, reinforcing
the case for phasing out coal, the report said.
The authors also calculated that the world could save up to $23
billion of power system costs per year by using onshore wind and
solar PV to replace the most expensive 500 gigawatts of
coal-fired power, mostly found in China, India, Ukraine, Poland,
South Korea, Japan, Germany and the United States.
Such a switch would also reduce global carbon dioxide emissions
by about the equivalent of 5% of the total CO2 emissions in
2019, the report found.
Next year, up to 1,200 GW of existing coal capacity could prove
more expensive to operate than the cost of building new
utility-scale solar PV farms, the report found.
(Reporting by Matthew Green; editing by Richard Pullin)
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