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posted by cmn32480 on Friday November 13 2015, @02:57AM   Printer-friendly

Renewables represent the future, even if they get far less in subsidies than fossil fuels. At least according to the data in the latest report from the International Energy Agency.

The agency's World Energy Outlook 2015 provides a comprehensive forecast of the use and consumption of energy worldwide. Energy demand is still rising—the IEA estimates that total global energy demand will rise by 33% by 2040—but a growing proportion of it will come from renewables. The growing popularity of efficiency and regulations promoting efficiency, meanwhile, will also keep a ceiling on overall demand.

Like last year's report, the 2015 report also underscores the vast sea change that has taken place in the world energy scenario. In the 2004 IEA report, solar didn't rate a mention and "efficiency" was only mentioned twice in the summary.

Sea change.


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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Friday November 13 2015, @03:35PM

    by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Friday November 13 2015, @03:35PM (#262691) Homepage
    Exactly. When I saw the headline "Despite Lavish Subsidies ...", I was thinking "In Part Because of Lavish Subsidies ...". They only appear good because of the lobby-and-government-created facade. Of course, who pays for the subsidies - the tax-payer. You're paying for your petrol twice...
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