World
Swarajya Staff
Jun 17, 2016, 02:43 PM | Updated 02:43 PM IST
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In its report predicting the future of energy, Bloomberg paints an optimistic picture. For instance, the installed capacity of solar power will rise from four percent today to 29 percent in 2040, according to the report. The share of wind energy will almost double to what it is at present. Hydro power will also see its share jump from current 12 percent to 18 percent.
The predicted drop in the coal consumption should bring cheer to all champions of green energy. Its share will come down from current 31 percent to 16 percent in the next 25 years, which is very significant.
What is strange is that the share of nuclear energy is also going to come down by one percent. But nuclear energy is very much a clean energy source. Why, then, are countries not going for it? High initial infrastructure costs and restrictions on technology use and sale are perhaps big impediments for them, especially for poor and developing nations.
Where does India stand?
The Modi government has big plans to ramp up India’s renewable energy share in total installed capacity. Last year, in June, the Union government increased its solar capacity target by five times, from 20 GW to 100 GW by 2021-2022. It also has ambitious plans for deployment of 60 GW of wind energy.
If these targets are met and the future governments also follow suit and keep increasing the installed solar capacity at the same rate, then by 2040 we could end up with 400 GW of solar energy. This would be 10 percent of the total installed capacity in solar space, which Bloomberg predicts the world will have in 2040. India has the opportunity to be a world leader, given it delivers on its promises.
Here is a brief summary from the Bloomberg report: