Visualized: A Decade of Clean Energy Investment

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May 21, 2024 Graphics & Design Visualized: A Decade of Clean Energy Investment

Global energy investment is growing every year. But recently, investments in clean energy have been significantly outpacing investments in fossil fuels.

For this graphic, we partnered with EnergyX to explore how global energy investment has changed and learn how investments in clean energy are starting to pay off for their investors.

The Rise of Sustainable Energy Investment

Propelled by various climate initiatives such as the Paris Agreement and the widespread adoption of EVs, global investment in sustainable energy surged to over $1.7 trillion in 2023, the highest ever, and the IEA projects that this growth could continue:

Energy Product20202021202220232030F Clean Electrification$0.97T$1.05$1.21T$1.34T$1.65T Low-Emission Fuels$0.01T$0.01$0.01T$0.02T$0.05T Energy Efficiency$0.28T$0.35$0.39T$0.38T$0.49T Clean Energy Total$1.26T$1.41T$1.61T$1.74T$2.19T Natural Gas$0.26T$0.27T$0.31T$0.32T$0.35T Oil$0.42T$0.48T$0.52T$0.55T$0.60T Coal$0.16T$0.16T$0.18T$0.18T$0.11T Fossil Fuel Total$0.84T$0.91T$1.01T$1.05T$1.06T Total Energy Investment$2.10T$2.32T$2.62T$2.79T$3.25T

Between 2020 and 2030, global investment in sustainable energy could increase by 74% to nearly $2.2 trillion, compared to just 26% additional investment in fossil fuels, with a forecast total of $1.06 trillion. This shows that sustainability is the future of energy investment. 

Sustainable Investor Success Stories

While the growing investments in clean energy show that the world embraces sustainability, energy investors will still look for decent returns. Now, in 2024, clean energy investments are beginning to bear fruit. Here are just a few examples:     

Between 2019 and 2023, Tesla had a cumulative return of 1,073%  NextEra Energy’s quarterly dividend increased by over 10% as of February 2024 Investors in EnergyX have 10x’ed their investments since the company’s first offering in 2021

Lithium plays a critical role in powering electric vehicles (EVs) and facilitating the transition to sustainable energy. EnergyX has patented technology that enhances lithium extraction rates by up to 300%, contributing to meeting the growing demand for lithium and fueling the EVs of the future.

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Who’s Building the Most Solar Energy?

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May 5, 2024

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Who’s Building the Most Solar Energy?

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

In 2023, solar energy accounted for three-quarters of renewable capacity additions worldwide. Most of this growth occurred in Asia, the EU, and the U.S., continuing a trend observed over the past decade.

In this graphic, we illustrate the rise in installed solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity in China, the EU, and the U.S. between 2010 and 2022, measured in gigawatts (GW). Bruegel compiled the data..

Chinese Dominance

As of 2022, China’s total installed capacity stands at 393 GW, nearly double that of the EU’s 205 GW and surpassing the USA’s total of 113 GW by more than threefold in absolute terms.

Installed solar
capacity (GW)ChinaEU27U.S. 2022393.0205.5113.0 2021307.0162.795.4 2020254.0136.976.4 2019205.0120.161.6 2018175.3104.052.0 2017130.896.243.8 201677.891.535.4 201543.687.724.2 201428.483.618.1 201317.879.713.3 20126.771.18.6 20113.153.35.6 20101.030.63.4

Since 2017, China has shown a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 25% in installed PV capacity, while the USA has seen a CAGR of 21%, and the EU of 16%.

Additionally, China dominates the production of solar power components, currently controlling around 80% of the world’s solar panel supply chain.

In 2022, China’s solar industry employed 2.76 million individuals, with manufacturing roles representing approximately 1.8 million and the remaining 918,000 jobs in construction, installation, and operations and maintenance.

The EU industry employed 648,000 individuals, while the U.S. reached 264,000 jobs.

According to the IEA, China accounts for almost 60% of new renewable capacity expected to become operational globally by 2028.

Despite the phasing out of national subsidies in 2020 and 2021, deployment of solar PV in China is accelerating. The country is expected to reach its national 2030 target for wind and solar PV installations in 2024, six years ahead of schedule.

Taxonomies are not Instruments of Industrial Policy

Christina Ng, Managing Director of the Energy Shift Institute says Asia’s transition finance complications could harm its climate goals.

Is transition finance an attempt to extend the spectrum of green finance? Or is it a covert means of financing non-green activities, which have had limited opportunity in gaining access to sustainability-conscious investors?

This phenomenon appears to be occurring in Asian markets.

And nowhere is this more apparent than in the realm of national financing frameworks, where the drive to foster economic growth is so strong that it can be pursued at the expense of transitioning to a genuinely green and sustainable energy future.

Recent developments underscore this troubling trend.

For example, Indonesia’s revamped Sustainable Finance Taxonomy incorporates certain new and existing coal-fired power plants as transition activities and therefore qualifies them for transition finance. The Indonesian government justifies this classification due to the role of coal power generation in processing critical minerals for electric vehicles and clean energy technologies – which aim to contribute to economic growth.

Flawed reasoning

This flawed reasoning not only perpetuates the reliance on fossil fuels but also risks alienating climate-minded foreign investors. Indonesia’s logic, if applied universally, would imply that any power plant, including fossil-fired ones, could be labelled transitional, simply because it powers the manufacturing of clean energy technologies.

Up in the northeast of the region, the government of Japan launched a Green Transformation (GX) policy. It aims to switch Japan’s fossil fuel-oriented industries to clean energy focused ones and issue sovereign transition bonds, among other instruments, to finance the GX plan. But a deeper dive reveals that the centrepiece of the government’s GX strategy is about ensuring economic growth.

This observation is also shared in a Sustainable Fitch note which found an emphasis on the term ‘competitiveness’. Specifically, the term was mentioned 15 times in the GX framework as compared to just once in Singapore’s green financing plan and not at all in India’s framework. The note goes on to say “this may explain why some of the eligible transition activities under Japan’s strategy are supportive of industry, but do not meet international green standards”. The questionable activities referred in Japan’s strategy include hydrogen, gas infrastructure, and ammonia co-firing in coal and gas power plants.

The approaches in Indonesia and Japan overlook the fundamental goal of sustainable finance – chiefly, to channel capital to activities that mitigate greenhouse gas emissions that would, in

EU Sparks Controversy on Energy Charter Treaty Drop

European Union will withdraw from ‘anti-green’ treaty on environmental grounds, but sources warn of impact on renewable investments.

The European Parliament’s vote last week to withdraw from the controversial Energy Charter Treaty has been interpreted as a near-certain ‘death blow’ to a decades-old agreement that is widely perceived as outdated and anti-green.

But the decision, which lawmakers say is necessary to protect the European Union’s climate policies against litigation from fossil fuel companies, may not be as positive for the energy transition as some believe.

James Rogers, an international arbitration lawyer and partner at law firm Jenner & Block, said the EU’s withdrawal – which he said left the treaty “dead” – could inadvertently harm the bloc’s green energy ambitions by reducing investor protections against policy changes.

Set up in 1994 in the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union, in part to open up gas imports from Russia and eastern Europe, the ECT provides energy investors with legal protection against the policy whims of national governments. Governments that expropriate assets or arbitrarily change rules may be taken to arbitration under the treaty. More than 50 countries across Europe and Asia have signed up to the treaty since, with Japan its easternmost member.

But as climate change became a key policy concern in Europe in subsequent years, the ECT progressively turned into a weapon for fossil fuel companies to fight against green policies that harmed their interests. It was under the ECT that German utilities RWE and Uniper, for example, sued the Dutch government for €2.4 billion over its plan to phase out coal-fired power back in 2021.

Critics say the threat of a legal challenge under the ECT alone has a “chilling effect” on green policy – which is real but difficult to quantify.

Some of its members pushed to modernise the framework. But these efforts largely failed, and a growing number of European signatories have already left or plan to leave the treaty, including the UK, France, Germany, Spain and Poland. The EU’s departure now turbo-charges that trend.

“Finally, the fossil dinosaur treaty is no longer standing in the way of consistent climate protection, as we no longer have to fear corporate lawsuits demanding billions of euro in compensation brought before private arbitration tribunals,” Anna Cavazzini, Member of the European Parliament and Rapporteur for the Trade Committee, said following the vote last week.

Not anti-green

According to