The renewable-energy industry could create more than a million jobs a year if countries invest enough to meet their target for cutting global carbon emissions, according to an advocacy organization. Solar, wind and other forms of green energy could add 42 million jobs by 2050 if nations spend more aggressively to limit the increase in average global temperatures, the International Renewable Energy Agency said.
Governments should not relax their efforts even though air pollution has abated in places as a result of the coronavirus’s impact on economic activity, the Abu Dhabi-based agency said in a report released on Monday. “This year will be very special because emissions will be decreasing,” Irena Director-General Francesco La Camera told reporters in a conference call.
“But we have to be very careful about a rebound effect that can bring us on the wrong path. What we are calling for is to avoid the wrong policies that may compromise this vision of the future.” Under the 2015 Paris climate accord, governments aim to limit the increase in temperatures this century to less than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The use of fossil fuels is widely blamed for contributing to global warming, and Irena promotes renewables as a way to minimize climate change. Oil futures fell on Monday April 19 to the lowest in more than two decades, on concern the world is rapidly running out of places to store crude after output cuts proved insufficient to cope with plunging demand. Volatility in oil prices will probably discourage investors.
In its first-ever Global Renewables Outlook, Irena also said: To meet the Paris accord temperature target, global investment in all types of energy must increase to $110 trillion over 2016-2050 from a currently planned $95 trillion The increase would include a doubling in investment in renewables, to $27 trillion from $13 trillion.
This greater renewables investment could create 42 million jobs, up from an estimated 11 million in the industry currently “New jobs in transition-related technologies and sectors are expected to outweigh job losses in fossil fuels and nuclear energy” The world could reach zero carbon emissions if investments ramped up to $130 trillion, of which $38 trillion would need to go to renewables.
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