• New industrial revolution predicted
• Renewable energy sector needs US$ 6 trillion investment from China, EU and UK through to 2035
Abu Dhabi,
Global investment in renewable energy increased to US$ 243 billion in 2010, up five-fold from 2009 according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. However, future investment in the renewable energy sector faces challenges from policy development, regulatory frameworks and economic market forces, according to industry leaders at the World Future Energy Summit (WFES) 2011.
Several highly respected figures from governments and capital markets debated the challenges facing future investment in the renewable energy sector during the WFES 2011 Finance and Investment Forum today in Abu Dhabi. During a keynote address, Dr. Fatih Birol, Chief Economist of International Energy Agency (IEA), France, gave his assessment of current and future investment in the renewable energy sector and touched on some of the challenges the sector faces.
“The main challenge from the economic crisis is over but full recovery is threatened by the lack of equilibrium between the cost and supply of oil,” said Birol. “High oil prices are a key risk to the fragile economic recovery among developed nations.”
Dr. Birol predicted that investment in renewable energy is set to triple between 2008 and 2035, mainly driven by the demand for power generation, but that the current glut of cheap gas and government fuel subsidies for generating power poses a threat.
“Government subsidies of energy fuels leads to inefficiencies and waste through artificially high use,” Birol said. “Coupled with the current gas glut this poses a real threat to future investment in renewables. Having said this, energy policy reforms being formulated and implemented by the UAE government need to be commended.”
He added, “One of the key drivers to seeing growth in renewable energy will be government support and the sector needs US$ 6 trillion investment from China, EU and UK through to 2035.”
While these threats exist, Birol added that costs for renewable energy development are falling due to huge demand from China: “China’s drive for low-carbon energy is helping with economies of scale and we may see China dominating clean energy technology which will have a huge impact on western economies, especially in the automotive sector.”
Lord Nicholas Stern, Chair of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics, UK, and author of the acclaimed 2006Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change , placed three factors on the agenda for investment in renewable energy: the scale of opportunity needs to be understood; policy development needs to be unhindered; and the pace of change needs to increase.
“In order that climate change targets can be achieved, we face the need for a new industrial revolution,” said Lord Stern.”That industrial revolution needs policy change as a driver to reach the scale of change required. With fundamentally strong policy, we can also increase the pace of that change.”
Morgan Bazilian, Special Advisor on Energy, United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), Austria, commented on Lord Stern’s assertion that a next industrial revolution was needed by holding up the UAE’s Mubadala as a ‘shining example’ of intelligent industrial development.
Rob Bradley, Special Policy Advisor to the UAE Ministry of Finance said investing in joint venture partners and international companies helped to build knowledge and capacity for indigenous management and expertise: “The UAE and wider region are attractive markets for investment in renewable energy as sources such as solar, wind and wave are plentiful. There is a tremendous political will in the UAE to develop the knowledge economy and technology investment in renewable energy. And while climate policy is often seen (elsewhere) as an adjunct to broader energy policies, it is something that is high on the UAE’s agenda and the government is supportive of a second term for the Kyoto Protocol.”
Today’s Finance and Investment Forum concludes the World Future Energy Summit 2011, which has been taking place at Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC) since Monday.
Now in its fourth year, WFES has grown to be one of the leading global forums for renewable energies. Over 3,000 delegates attended today’s opening ceremony and over 25,000 visitors are expected to attend the event over the course of the four days. The 2010 event attracted over 24,000 delegates from 148 counties – over two thirds of all the recognised countries in the world – a clear indication that the international community is finally waking up to the importance and opportunities that are associated with alternative energies.