Global solar capacity hits two terawatts, data shows
The challenge now is to achieve 8TW of installed solar power by 2030
07 November 2024 - 15:00
bySusanna Twidale
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London — Global solar capacity has reached a record two terawatts (TW) of capacity, with more added in the last two years than the previous 68 combined, exclusive data from the sector’s global industry group shared with Reuters showed.
The updated figures have not previously been published, and the Global Solar Council said they give the fullest picture yet because they include small, rooftop installations often left out of official government data.
After the 2TW milestone was breached this quarter, global solar capacity has become enough to power about 92-million US households, the council said.
“Governments often don’t have the full picture in terms of solar because they’re often missing a lot of the small rooftop projects because they just never get registered anywhere in a lot of countries,” Sonia Dunlop, CEO of the Global Solar Council, told Reuters in an interview.
The challenge now, she said, was to achieve 8TW of installed solar power in total by 2030, which the data suggests is possible and would amount to more than half of the 11TW of renewable capacity needed to achieve a UN goal set at climate talks in Dubai last year.
To raise financing to help hit the goal, the council will launch an International Solar Finance group at the next round of UN talks beginning on November 11 in Baku.
The council wants to connect funds, multilateral banks, private finance and international institutions to drive down the cost of capital in emerging and developing economies to 5% from 15%.
To calculate the latest data, the council, with European industry group SolarPower Europe, gathered deployment data from national solar associations and solar developers globally.
Some 60% of the 2TW deployed comes from ground-mounted solar farms, while rooftop solar projects make up 40% of the total, the data showed.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Global solar capacity hits two terawatts, data shows
The challenge now is to achieve 8TW of installed solar power by 2030
London — Global solar capacity has reached a record two terawatts (TW) of capacity, with more added in the last two years than the previous 68 combined, exclusive data from the sector’s global industry group shared with Reuters showed.
The updated figures have not previously been published, and the Global Solar Council said they give the fullest picture yet because they include small, rooftop installations often left out of official government data.
After the 2TW milestone was breached this quarter, global solar capacity has become enough to power about 92-million US households, the council said.
“Governments often don’t have the full picture in terms of solar because they’re often missing a lot of the small rooftop projects because they just never get registered anywhere in a lot of countries,” Sonia Dunlop, CEO of the Global Solar Council, told Reuters in an interview.
The challenge now, she said, was to achieve 8TW of installed solar power in total by 2030, which the data suggests is possible and would amount to more than half of the 11TW of renewable capacity needed to achieve a UN goal set at climate talks in Dubai last year.
To raise financing to help hit the goal, the council will launch an International Solar Finance group at the next round of UN talks beginning on November 11 in Baku.
The council wants to connect funds, multilateral banks, private finance and international institutions to drive down the cost of capital in emerging and developing economies to 5% from 15%.
To calculate the latest data, the council, with European industry group SolarPower Europe, gathered deployment data from national solar associations and solar developers globally.
Some 60% of the 2TW deployed comes from ground-mounted solar farms, while rooftop solar projects make up 40% of the total, the data showed.
Reuters
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