Cost of renewable energy 10 times cheaper than `business as usual'
fossil-fuelled future, says breakthrough report

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0707/S00090.htm


Savings of US $180 billion per year predicted in first global
analysis of renewable energy versus fossil fuels

Amsterdam/Brussels, 6th July 2007: Investing in a renewable
electricity future will save 10 times the fuel costs of a `business
as usual' fossil-fuelled scenario,
saving $180 billion USD annually and cut CO2 emissions in half by
2030, according to a joint report by Greenpeace and the European
Renewable Energy
Council (EREC) released today. (1)



In the first global analysis of its kind, "Future Investment - A
sustainable Investment Plan for the power sector to save the
Climate', demonstrates
a powerful economic argument for a shift in global investments
towards renewable energy (including solar, wind, hydro, geothermal
and bio energy), within
the next 23 years, and away from dangerous coal and nuclear power.
The report gives the financial rationale for Greenpeace's "Energy [R]
evolution,"
a blueprint for how to cut global CO2 emissions by 50% by 2050, while
maintaining global economic growth (2).

"As Live Earth mobilises billions of people to take urgent action
against the climate threat, our report shows not only that the
world's electricity
needs can be met by renewable energy, but that by doing so, we will
literally save trillions of dollars; a massive US $180 billion a
year, forever"
said Sven Teske, Greenpeace International, Energy Expert .

"In sharp contrast, a `business as usual' approach casts a dark cloud
over our future. Its 10,000 new fossil fuel power plants,
would increase global CO2 emissions by over 50%, and more than double
fuel costs; there is no way of putting a price on the disastrous
results
this will have for environment and humanity."

The Energy [R]evolution needs an extra global annual inventment of
$22 billion in clean and renewable power plants on top of current
expenditure.
The fuel cost savings in the scenario, of up to $202 billion per
year, means this will pay for itself ten times over. Meanwhile,
converting the massive subsidies of $250 billion a year that coal and
gas receive to clean, safe renewable energy will
cover the costs of the energy [r]evolution and much more.

According to EREC the global market for wind turbines was worth some
€18 billion in 2006, and the total renewable industry $50 billion.
Under an energy [r]evolution scenario, the renewable energy would be
worth a massive $ 288 billion by 2030.

"The renewable industry is willing and able to deliver the power
plants the world needs, we simply need the right climate and energy
policy.
Decisions made in the next few years, will continue to have an impact
in 2050. Only if a renewable energy path is taken, can
we avoid the worst excesses of climate change!" said Oliver Schäfer,
EREC policy director.

The report stresses the urgent need for decisive action now. In the
next decade, many existing power plants will need replacing,
and emerging economies such as China, India and Brazil are rapidly
building new energy infrastructure.


A copy of "Future Investment - A sustainable Investment Plan for the
power sector to save the Climate' is available
at http://www.greenpeace.org/energy-revolution-financing









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