Global energy investments set to recover but remain far from net zero pathway: IEA
Jun 07, 2021
Paris [France], June 7 : Global investment in energy is set to rebound by nearly 10 per cent this year to 1.9 trillion dollars, reversing most of last year's drop caused the Covid-19 pandemic, but spending on clean energy transitions needs to accelerate much more rapidly to meet climate goals, according to a new report from the International Energy Agency (IEA).
With energy investment returning to pre-crisis levels, its composition is continuing to shift towards electricity. 2021 is on course to be the sixth year in a row that investment in the power sector exceeds that in traditional oil and gas supply, according to the World Energy Investment 2021 report.
Global power sector investment is set to increase by around 5 per cent in 2021 to more than 820 billion dollars, its highest ever level, after staying flat in 2020. Renewables are dominating investment in new power generation capacity and are expected to account for 70 per cent of the total this year.
And that money now goes further than ever in financing clean electricity, with a dollar spent on solar PV deployment today resulting in four times more electricity than ten years ago, thanks to greatly improved technology and falling costs.
"The rebound in energy investment is a welcome sign, and I am encouraged to see more of it flowing towards renewables," said Fatih Birol, the IEA's Executive Director.
"But much greater resources have to be mobilised and directed to clean energy technologies to put the world on track to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. Based on our new Net Zero Roadmap, clean energy investment will need to triple by 2030."
While renewables dominate new power investment, and approvals for coal-fired plants are some 80 per cent below where they were five years ago, coal is not out of the picture. There was even a slight increase in go-aheads for coal-fired plants in 2020, driven by China and some other Asian economies.
Upstream oil and gas investment is expected to rise by about 10 per cent in 2021 as companies recover financially from the shock of 2020, but their spending remains well below pre-crisis levels. The new report highlights the diverging strategies among different oil and gas companies.
The majors are holding oil and gas spending flat on aggregate in 2021, despite recovering prices. Meanwhile, some national oil companies are stepping up investment, raising the possibility of increased market share if demand continues to grow.
Qatar's decision to move ahead with the world's largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) expansion, and to include carbon capture technologies in this investment, is a strong signal of its intent to maintain a leadership position in LNG.
There are signs in the latest data that spending by some global oil and gas companies is starting to diversify. IEA analysis last year highlighted that only around 1 per cent of capital spending by the industry was going to clean energy investments.
But project tracking to date in 2021 suggests that this could rise to 4 per cent this year for the industry as a whole, and well above 10 per cent for some of the leading European companies.
The anticipated 750 billion dollars to be spent on clean energy technologies and efficiency in 2021 is encouraging but remains far below what's required to put the energy system on a sustainable path.
Clean energy investment will need to triple in the 2020s to put the world on track to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, thereby keeping the door open for a 1.5 degrees Celcius stabilisation of the rise in global temperatures.