U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Wind Program
Report: Global Renewable Energy Experiencing Double-Digit Growth
December 12, 2007
Renewable energy use is growing much faster than 10% per year
throughout the world, according to a new report from the Renewable
Energy Policy Network for the 21st Century (REN21). Excluding large
hydropower, the global electric generating capacity of renewable
energy facilities reached 237 gigawatts (GW) this year, up 15% from
last year. That's about 5.5% of the electric generating capacity
throughout the world. At 93 GW, wind power provided about 40% of that
renewable generating capacity; wind power capacity increased by 25%
over 2006. Grid-connected solar photovoltaic systems reached 7.8 GW in
capacity, a 56% increase, while the global production of photovoltaic
systems reached 3.8 GW per year, a 52% increase over 2006.
Among non-electric renewable energy sources, solar hot water capacity
increased by 17% to 121 thermal GW. Global ethanol production
increased 16% to 11.6 billion gallons, while biodiesel production
increased by a third to more than 2 billion gallons. The REN21 report
estimates that global investment in renewable energy will exceed
$100 billion in 2007, including $15-$20 billion invested in large
hydropower facilities, at least $66 billion invested in other
renewable energy facilities, $10-$12 billion invested in manufacturing
plants for photovoltaic devices and biofuels, and $16 billion invested
in public and private research and development. The full REN21 report
will be published in January, but a pre-publication summary has been
released in December, in time for the climate conference in Bali. See the REN21
press release and pre-publication summary (PDF 765 KB).
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