A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system
An analysis of historical cost trends of energy technologies shows that the decades-long increase in the deployment of renewable energy technologies has consistently coincided with steep declines in their costs. For example, the cost of solar photovoltaics has declined by three orders of magnitude o...
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格式: | Report |
語言: | English |
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Oxford University Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment
2021
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author | Ives, M Righetti, L Schiele, J De Meyer, K Hubble-Rose, L Teng, F Kruitwagen, L Tillmann-Morris, L Wang, T Way, R Hepburn, C |
author_facet | Ives, M Righetti, L Schiele, J De Meyer, K Hubble-Rose, L Teng, F Kruitwagen, L Tillmann-Morris, L Wang, T Way, R Hepburn, C |
author_sort | Ives, M |
collection | OXFORD |
description | An analysis of historical cost trends of energy technologies shows that the decades-long increase in the deployment of renewable energy technologies has consistently coincided with steep declines in their costs. For example, the cost of solar photovoltaics has declined by three orders of magnitude over the last 50 years. Similar trends are to be found with wind, energy storage, and electrolysers (hydrogen-based energy). Such declines are set to continue and will take several of these renewable technologies well below the cost base for current fossil fuel energy generation. Most major climate mitigation models produced for the IPCC and the International Energy Agency have continually underestimated such trends despite their being quite consistent and predictable.
By incorporating such trends into a simple, transparent energy system model we produce new climate mitigation scenarios that provide a contrasting perspective to those of the standard models. These new scenarios provide an opportunity to shift the common narrative that a Paris-compliant emissions pathway will be expensive, will require reduced energy services or economic growth, and will need to rely on technologies that are currently expensive or unproven as scale. This research provides encouraging evidence for governments that are looking for greater ambition on decarbonising their economies while providing economic growth opportunities and affordable energy. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T19:23:00Z |
format | Report |
id | oxford-uuid:1abe068b-c619-4ec2-bfbe-f9b67d631bd5 |
institution | University of Oxford |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T19:23:00Z |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | Oxford University Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:1abe068b-c619-4ec2-bfbe-f9b67d631bd52022-03-26T10:56:29ZA new perspective on decarbonising the global energy systemReporthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_93fcuuid:1abe068b-c619-4ec2-bfbe-f9b67d631bd5EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment2021Ives, MRighetti, LSchiele, JDe Meyer, KHubble-Rose, LTeng, FKruitwagen, LTillmann-Morris, LWang, TWay, RHepburn, CAn analysis of historical cost trends of energy technologies shows that the decades-long increase in the deployment of renewable energy technologies has consistently coincided with steep declines in their costs. For example, the cost of solar photovoltaics has declined by three orders of magnitude over the last 50 years. Similar trends are to be found with wind, energy storage, and electrolysers (hydrogen-based energy). Such declines are set to continue and will take several of these renewable technologies well below the cost base for current fossil fuel energy generation. Most major climate mitigation models produced for the IPCC and the International Energy Agency have continually underestimated such trends despite their being quite consistent and predictable. By incorporating such trends into a simple, transparent energy system model we produce new climate mitigation scenarios that provide a contrasting perspective to those of the standard models. These new scenarios provide an opportunity to shift the common narrative that a Paris-compliant emissions pathway will be expensive, will require reduced energy services or economic growth, and will need to rely on technologies that are currently expensive or unproven as scale. This research provides encouraging evidence for governments that are looking for greater ambition on decarbonising their economies while providing economic growth opportunities and affordable energy. |
spellingShingle | Ives, M Righetti, L Schiele, J De Meyer, K Hubble-Rose, L Teng, F Kruitwagen, L Tillmann-Morris, L Wang, T Way, R Hepburn, C A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title | A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title_full | A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title_fullStr | A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title_full_unstemmed | A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title_short | A new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
title_sort | new perspective on decarbonising the global energy system |
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