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    Chinese solar boom sparks global renewables boon: study

    A Chinese boom in solar panel installation last year helped drive global investment in renewable clean energy technology to record levels, a new study showed Tuesday, 16 January.
    Chinese solar boom sparks global renewables boon: study
    © leuchtturm2013 – za.fotolia.com

    After a dip in 2016, overall global investment in the sector rose 3.0% to a total $333.5bn, offsetting falls in Japan, Germany and Britain, according to the Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) study. That was the second best annual showing to date after $360.3bn in 2015.

    "The 2017 total is all the more remarkable when you consider that capital costs for the leading technology - solar - continue to fall sharply," said BNEF chief executive Jon Moore. Solar investment came in at $160.8bn in 2017, a rise of 18% despite per megawatt capital costs falling by around a quarter, with China accounting for around half the overall total at $86.5bn - up 24%, the study said.

    "China installed about 20GW more solar capacity in 2017 than we forecast," said Justin Wu, BNEF head of the Asia-Pacific region, as the Chinese notably showed off the world's first photovoltaic expressway.

    Investment in wind power slipped back 12% last year, however, to $107.2bn after a strong rise in 2016.

    Solar and wind power remain far out in front in terms of renewable energy forms ahead of the likes of biomass, geothermal and small scale hydroelectricity which each attracted less than $5bn last year.

    Well behind China, the United States landed investments of $56.9bn - a rise even so of 1.0% despite an unfavourable political climate with President Donald Trump sceptical of climate change and withdrawing his country from the Paris climate agreement.

    The study highlighted what it termed Washington's "less friendly tone towards renewables".

    A handful of countries saw investments more than double, including Sweden to $4bn and Australia to $9bn.

    Egypt saw a 495% increase to $2.6bn while investment in the United Arab Emirates enjoyed a dizzying 23-fold rise to $2.2bn.

    Europe saw a notable decline in renewables investment to $57.4bn, the fall-off hitting 26% in Germany and 56% for the United Kingdom on energy policy changes. Japan saw a 16% drop, while India was down 20% to $11bn.

    BNEF estimated last year saw a record 160GW of renewable power installed, not counting hydroelectricity, comprising 98GW of solar and 56GW of wind power. Energy-smart technology, such as smart meters and energy storage, is also making headway, BNEF noted.

    Source: AFP

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