Press release - November 12, 2008
Greenpeace has warned that the IEA's World Energy Outlook 2008 'business as usual' approach will condemn the world to catastrophic climate impacts. Paying lip service to the climate change crisis, the IEA forecasts more fossil fuel consumption than the planet can handle, while promoting carbon capture and storage and nuclear power.
"The IEA report may see no shortage of oil and gas resources
over the coming decades, but there is another resource which does
have a limit - the world's climate. The IEA has produced an example
of what not to do. In failing to keep temperature rise below 2
degrees, it shows that in fact we should not be investing in new
fossil fuel exploration and production infrastructure, but in
renewable power and the smart use of energy instead," said Sven
Teske, Greenpeace International's Senior Energy Expert.
The latest version of Greenpeace's 'Energy [R]evolution: A
Sustainable World Energy Outlook', produced in conjunction with the
European Renewable Energy Council, shows how renewable energy,
combined with greater energy efficiency, can reduce global
energy-related CO2 emissions
from today's 28 billion tonnes to 20.9 billion tonnes by 2030 -
half of the emissions from the IEA's reference scenario in the same
year. Using the same assumptions for economic growth, fuel costs
and population development as the IEA, the Greenpeace scenario also
includes long-term projections to 2050 - with a 50% CO2 cut and a complete fossil fuel
phase-out by 2090.
Key Differences
- The most ambitious (450 ppm) IEA scenario results in an
emission peak by 2020. The Energy [R]evolution scenario achieves
the 2015 peak that the UN International Panel on Climate Change
says is necessary to avoid catastrophic climate change.
- The most ambitious IEA scenario brings emissions from energy
use down to 25.7 gigatonnes per year in 2030. The Energy
[R]evolution reduces these emissions by a further 20%, 20.9
gigatonnes per year, almost half the business as usual
emissions.
- The most ambitious IEA scenario relies on unsustainable nuclear
power and unproven carbon capture and storage (CCS). The Energy
[R]evolution phases out nuclear power and incorporates only proven
technologies.
- Energy demand for power generation in the most ambitious IEA
scenario and the Energy [R]evolution is almost the same, but the
Energy [R]evolution shows that energy demand for the heating,
transport and industry sectors could be 13.2% lower.
Key Issues
- There are currently no commercial CCS plants operating or
planned, yet the IEA believes two to three coal-fired power plants
equipped with CCS will be brought online every month between now
and 2030.
- The projected uptake of nuclear energy in the alternative IEA
scenarios is equally unrealistic, requiring the grid connection of
a new nuclear reactor every month until 2030, a volume far beyond
the nuclear industry's capacity.
"A renewable energy pathway is good for both the planet and the
economy. Under business as usual, the IEA projects an investment of
US$ 13.6 trillion in the power sector up to 2030. In comparison,
the Greenpeace scenario costs only 8% more, but saves more than US$
18 trillion in fuel cost," added Teske.
To illustrate what an energy revolution means, Greenpeace has
opened a climate rescue station in Poland today, urging the Polish
government to quit coal ahead of the Poznan climate talks. In
October 2008, Greenpeace Poland released a national Energy
[R]evolution scenario showing that, despite coal industry claims to
the contrary, Poland does not need to base its energy production on
coal. The report illustrates how, by 2050, Poland will be able to
generate 80% of its electricity from renewable resources, such as
wind and solar power.
Other contacts: Sven Teske, Greenpeace International renewable energy campaign
+ 31 62129 68 94
Alexandra Dawe, Greenpeace International communications officer
+ 31 629001146
Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 20 718 24 70
Notes:
- A more detailed briefing on the differences between Energy [R]evolution: A sustainable World Energy Outlook and the IEA's World Energy Outlook 2008 can be downloaded here: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/reports/Energy-revolution-vs-IEA
- Copies of the Energy [R]evolution: A sustainable World Energy Outlook report can be downloaded from: http://www.greenpeace.org/energyrevolution
- The report, published on 27 October 2008, provides a practical blueprint for rapidly cutting energy-related CO2 emissions in order to help ensure that greenhouse gas emissions peak and then fall by 2015. This can be achieved while ensuring economies in China, India and other developing nations have access to the energy that they need to develop.
- The report was developed in conjunction with specialists from the Institute of Technical Thermodynamics at the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), the Dutch Institute Ecofys and more than 40 scientists and engineers from universities, institutes and the renewable energy industry around the world.
- This year's edition of the Energy [R]evolution adds detailed analysis of the potential for energy efficiency, future transport systems such as electric cars and a financial analysis of the power sector.
- The report provides a comprehensive global energy concept which gives a detailed analysis of how to restructure the global energy system based on a detailed regional assessment for the potential of proven renewable energy sources, energy efficiency and the utilisation of efficient decentralised cogeneration. The Energy [R]evolution Scenario is compared to the 'business as usual' scenario provided by the International Energy Association's breakdown of 10 world regions as used in the ongoing series of World Energy Outlook reports.