HomeNewsEnvironmentGlobal CO2 emissions to peak this year, but cheaper solar gears may help reverse the trend

Global CO2 emissions to peak this year, but cheaper solar gears may help reverse the trend

The cost of deploying solar panels and battery technology is expected to go down 19 percent by 2030, helping deliver record amounts of low-carbon power, setting the stage for a 2.2-fold growth for renewables

October 09, 2024 / 07:17 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
warming
This was the second-warmest September ever recorded in the world.

The world perhaps never felt it more chocking, as carbon-di-oxide (CO2) emissions likely to have scaled a peak this year, but a breather seems to be round the corner with the cost of solar panels and batteries crowding out coal and stunting the growth of oil, says a report by DNV, a Norwegian risk management company.

C02 emissions had scaled a record high last year, making it increasingly harder to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. DNV said even if emissions peak this year, they are cumulative and a slow decline after the peak means warming of 2.2 degrees is the most likely scenario this century, news agency Reuters reported.

Story continues below Advertisement

DNV pointed out that the transition to clean energy remains too slow. “Worryingly, our forecasted decline is very far from the trajectory required to meet the Paris Agreement targets,” Bloomberg quoted DNV Chief Executive Officer Remi Eriksen as saying in the report. “In particular, the hard-to-electrify sectors need a renewed policy push.”

The build-out of solar photovoltaic (PV) and batteries is booming. In 2023, new solar installations surged by 80 percent to reach 400 gigawatts (GW) and the costs in many regions became cheaper than coal. As battery prices fell by 14 percent last year and may slide further, 24-hour solar and storage power has become more accessible.