In policy circles right now or the work the ember is doing there isn't this talk of a fair redistribution of energy. The countries like the USA cannot consume 15 times per capita but they should be according to the UN whilst other nations people are consuming a fraction of it and living in sort of well desperate fuel. So you're basically at the level where clean electricity is matching electricity demand growth which is why we're kind of at peaking emissions for the power sector now. And then obviously you look within the UK and coal generation has gone from like 40% down to one or 2% in in in not much more than a decade. But globally we're attempting the world's electricity from when
Dave Jones is the Head of Data Insights at Ember, a think tank helping shift the world from coal to clean energy—rapidly.
Dave joined me to discuss the energy transition, going into detail about the impact of coal, gas and oil before comparing our renewable options. He reveals the nations around the world leading the renewable race, the supply chain weaknesses that need to be addressed, and, as ever, the necessity of energy demands vs desires.
“We need to get beyond just thinking about coal and gas power, and to be thinking about like the extra electrification of all the other sectors coming on, because that's gonna hit us really hard in the next few years….
“It's not hitting us at the moment, we’re seeing it fall at the moment. But we know that we’re going to get this big increase coming in the next few years, and trying to keep an eye on that, trying to make sure that we’re putting that into our calculations —Christ, we’re going to have to build an awful lot of clean electricity for all of this.”
Planet: Critical investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it.
© Rachel Donald
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