U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Wind Program
Global Annual Investment in Renewable Energy Hits $100 Billion
June 27, 2007
The investment capital flowing into renewable energy technologies
reached $100 billion in 2006, according to an analysis by the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Of that, a record $71 billion
was invested in companies and new sector opportunities, up 43% from
2005, while roughly $30 billion was due to mergers, acquisitions,
leveraged buyouts, and asset refinancing. Wind power, solar energy,
and biofuels are drawing most of the investments, including roughly
$28 billion invested in new generating capacity. In addition, venture
capital and private equity investors poured $2.3 billion into
biofuels, $1.4 billion into solar energy, and $1.3 billion into wind
power, mainly to increase manufacturing capacity. According to the
report, renewable energy investment is nearly evenly split between the
United States and Europe.
While some may be tempted to compare the renewable energy investment
boom to the earlier dotcom boom, the UNEP report notes that the
renewable energy boom is underpinned by real demand, growing
regulatory support, the considerable backing of tangible assets, and
increasing revenues. Most if not all of these factors were lacking
during the dotcom boom, which ultimately became a burst bubble. See
the UNEP press release
(PDF 392 KB)
and the full report (PDF 2.7 MB).
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