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Nations' renewable energy plans disappoint target, says IRENA

Governments' targets and strategies to speed up making use of renewable resource are set to provide only half of the growth needed to reach a U.N. climate goal to triple capability by 2030, a report by the International Renewable Energy Firm (IRENA) showed.

WHY IT is necessary

The renewable resource goal set at the COP28 U.N. environment conference in 2015, along with a target to double energy performance, are seen as essential to keeping a 1.5 degree Celsius ( 2.7 Fahrenheit) warming limitation this century within reach.

Nations need to upgrade their nationally identified contributions (NDCs), or dedications to combat environment modification, by February next year. Some are expected to announce them at the COP29 conference in November in Azerbaijan.

BY THE NUMBERS

The IRENA report tracked the progress of nations towards those objectives. To satisfy the renewables target, set up capacity would need to grow from 3.9 terawatts (TW) today to 11.2 TW by 2030, requiring an extra 7.3 TW in under seven years.

However existing strategies are estimated to leave a gap of 3.8 TW by 2030, falling short of the objective by 34%.

Yearly investment in renewable capability needs to triple to $ 1.5 trillion each year from 2024 to 2030 from $570 billion last year, the report stated.

The yearly energy intensity enhancement rate should also increase from 2% in 2022 to 4% in between 2023 and 2030.

CONTEXT

An IEA report today said renewable resource sources are set to meet nearly half of all electricity need by the end of the decade however will fall short of the U.N. goal.

CRUCIAL QUOTE

The COP28 objectives of tripling renewables and doubling energy performance are key enablers for our global efforts to keep 1.5 C. within reach but we risk missing them. The next NDCs should mark a. turning point and bring the world back on track, said Francesco. La Cam, IRENA's director general.

(source: Reuters)