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IEEFA report highlights $400bn annual investment gap
Representatives of different countries at the 29th Conference of Parties (COP29) in Baku should deliver key decisions to design policies and regulations and offer institutional support that encourages banks to lend more to the renewable energy sector, a new briefing note by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) states.
The document analyses global renewables investment trends and projected gaps to meet the goal of tripling renewable energy capacity by 2030 from 2023.
It finds by reorienting capital from the fossil fuel sector to clean energy, banks can bridge the International Energy Agency’s projected annual investment gap of US$400bn from 2024 to 2030.
“With only six years remaining, the 2030 goal for renewable energy seems a stretch too far, but enhanced cooperation between developed and developing countries and conducive local policies may bridge the gap,” says the note’s co-author and IEEFA director – South Asia Vibhuti Garg.
“Negotiators at COP29 in Baku should back their ambition to triple renewable energy up with a consensus on additional climate finance, supported by the developed countries, to fill the gap of catalytic funds in the developing and least-developed countries,” she added.
The note finds that under different estimates, global investment in renewables has been growing, highlighting the attractiveness of renewable energy among investors. It rose from the range of US$329bn -US$424bn in 2019 to US$570bn-US$735bn in 2023, implying a jump of 73%-78% during this period. However, the average annual investment to attain the goal of tripling renewable energy will require between US$1tn-US$1.5tn from 2024 through 2030.
As such, the average funding gap between 2024 and 2030 will reach US$400bn per annum.
The note’s co-author and IEEFA lead analyst – Bangladesh Energy Shafiqul Alam said: “While bank credit flows to the fossil fuel sector is declining, it was still a whopping US$967bn in 2022.
“On the flip side, low-carbon development projects, including renewable energy, received US$708bn in the same year.
“By reorienting more capital to the renewable energy sector, banks can bridge the projected investment gap.”
The note highlights several ways to encourage banks to change, like prioritising lending for renewable energy, offering banks credit enhancement support, integrating climate change into banks’ policies, interoperability of green taxonomies, making financed emissions disclosures mandatory and monetary policy tools.
The note’s co-author and IEEFA consultant – sustainable finance Labanya Prakash Jena said: “Governments can create partial credit risk guarantee instruments to reduce credit risk, encouraging banks to accelerate credit flows to the sector.
“Multilateral Development Banks and bilateral financial institutions, with support from local governments, can provide risky and concessional capital to local banks and help create partial risk guarantee instruments.”
Besides, the central bank can use moral suasion to nudge commercial banks to increase capital flows toward the clean energy sector while moving away from thermal power plants. |