LONDON - Tuesday, December 1st 2015 [ME NewsWire]
Most technologies needed for the transition to a low carbon energy system already exist, but costs need to be reduced and deployment accelerated to have any chance of meeting 2050 climate targets. Global collaboration can help, but it has proven extremely difficult to generate real momentum for action.
Over the past two decades there have been hundreds of bilateral and multilateral commitments on low carbon technology innovation. Some have delivered success but the overall impact has been less than expected. In many cases the original intentions behind agreements have been lost and implementation has been limited.
Carbon Trust analysis estimates that investments of US$5 trillion will be needed to deploy low carbon energy technologies by 2025. This could be reduced by over US$550 billion through collaborative innovation.
While competition in the private sector remains essential, a lack of collaboration between national programmes runs the risk of duplicating efforts. More significantly, a lack of effective coordination has resulted in the emergence of a number of barriers, such as misaligned incentives and contradicting regulatory regimes, which prevent private sector involvement at scale.
Tom Delay, Chief Executive of the Carbon Trust said:
“Transitioning to a low carbon energy system is beyond the capability of any single country. Climate change is a global problem that needs global solutions. We are seeing unprecedented levels of commitment from COP21 in Paris, but to ensure we keep to a 2 degree scenario the road through Paris cannot only be paved with good intentions.
We need action, we need more of it and we need it now. We cannot afford to wait any longer. The technological foundations of the transition to a low carbon energy system must be laid in the next ten years.
We must work together to make it happen, but we recognise that collaboration can be a particularly difficult endeavour. The good news is that working together is good for a country’s national interests, creating a bigger share of a bigger prize.”
The report also highlights that newly industrialising economies and developing countries represent 90 percent of growth in future energy consumption. They have faced difficulties in accessing and adapting low carbon technologies. But they can overcome this challenge by working with developed countries as active participants, not passive recipients, of technology transfers.
The Carbon Trust has developed a framework for international collaboration that addresses these barriers and provides mechanisms for streamlining existing initiatives.
Full report: www.carbontrust.com/unitedinnovations
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