2017-01-04

A tenfold jump in green technology such as renewables is required to meet global emissions targets says a new study out of Duke University in the USA.

The analysis shows per-capita carbon emissions have increased about 100 percent every 60 years since the Second Industrial Revolution, a period commencing at the end of the 19th century and start of the 20th.

This was compared with the speed of new innovations in low-carbon-emitting technologies and coupled with projections of future global population growth.

“As a consequence, to limit global warming below 2°C, the use of renewable energy sources and large-scale deployment of negative emissions technologies must spread with historically unprecedented minimal delays, ” says the study paper, published in the journal Earth’s Future

Gabriele Manoli, a former postdoctoral associate at Duke’s Nicholas School of the Environment and study lead, says the lag in the spread of emission reducing technologies can sometimes be technical in nature; but it can also be caused by political or economic barriers.



Image Source : Duke University

“Radically new strategies to implement technological advances on a global scale and at unprecedented rates are needed if current emissions goals are to be achieved,” says Mr. Manoli.

The political issue can be a major one – we’ve certainly seen our share of it in Australia.

A good example of political interference stymieing the uptake of renewables dates back to the 1980’s in the USA.

In 1979, then-US President Jimmy Carter dedicated a new solar hot water system installed on the White House roof, stating “.. a generation from now, this solar heater can either be a curiosity, a museum piece, an example of a road not taken”.

Solar on the White House roof was a powerful statement, but unfortunately, the latter eventuated to some degree. President Ronald Reagan ordered the system be pulled down in 1986, with the Administration stating the panels “didn’t befit a superpower”. Just as the installation was a powerful signal, so too was its removal.

It would take nearly 40 years for solar energy technology to again be installed on the White House rooftop – but instead of it being a pioneering move as it was originally, it was more a case of bowing to public pressure and jumping on the bandwagon. Still, it’s had a positive impact.

It makes you wonder where solar power uptake might be today globally if Ronald Reagan had shared President Carter’s passion for renewable energy.

The post Green Tech Uptake Must Dramatically Accelerate appeared first on Energy Matters.

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