Towards Sustainable Energy: A Systematic Review of Renewable Energy Sources, Technologies, and Public Opinions
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- 08 August 2023
Clean energy can fuel the future — and make the world healthier
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China is on track to reach its solar-power target for 2030. Credit: Zhao Yongtao/VCG/Getty
The 2030 targets laid out by the United Nations for the seventh Sustainable Development Goal (SDG 7) are clear enough: provide affordable access to energy; expand use of renewable sources; improve energy efficiency year on year; and enhance international cooperation in support of clean-energy research, development and infrastructure. Meeting those goals, however, will be anything but simple. As seen in many of the editorials in this series examining the SDGs at their halfway stage , the world is falling short.
This is due, at least in part, to the influence of the fossil-fuel industry, which drives the economics and, often, the politics of countries large and small, rich and poor. Rising human prosperity, as measured by economic growth, has long been linked to an abundance of fossil fuels. Many politicians fear that the pursuit of clean-energy sources will compromise that economic development. The latest science clearly counters this view — but the voice of the research community is not being heard in the right places. To meet the targets embodied in SDG 7, that has to change.
There is much to be done. In 2021, some 675 million people worldwide still did not have access to electricity. This is down from 1.1 billion a decade or so ago, but the pace of progress has slowed. On the basis of current trends, 660 million people, many of them in sub-Saharan Africa, will remain without electricity by 2030. And projections indicate that some 1.9 billion people will still be using polluting and inefficient cooking systems fuelled by coal and wood (see go.nature.com/3s8d887 ). This is bad news all round: for health, biodiversity and the climate.
Carbon emissions hit new high: warning from COP27
Achieving the energy-access targets was always going to be a stretch, but progress has been slow elsewhere, too. Take energy efficiency. More energy efficiency means less pollution, and energy efficiency has increased by around 2% annually in the past few years. But meeting the target for 2030 — to double the rate of the 1990–2010 average — would require gains of around 3.4% every year for the rest of this decade.
The picture for renewable energy is similarly mixed. Despite considerable growth in wind and solar power to generate grid electricity, progress in the heat and transport sectors remains sluggish. Renewable energy’s share of total global energy consumption was just 19.1% in 2020, according to the latest UN tracking report, but one-third of that came from burning resources such as wood.
One reason for the slow progress is the continued idea that aggressive clean-energy goals will get in the way of economic development. It’s easier and more profitable for major fossil-fuel producers to simply maintain the status quo. Just last month, ministers from the G20 group of the world’s biggest economies, including the European Union, India, Saudi Arabia and the United States, failed to agree on a plan to phase out fossil fuels and triple the capacity of renewable energy by 2030.
But this is where science has a story to tell. In the past, researchers say, many models indicated that clean energy would be more expensive than that from fossil fuels, potentially pricing the poorest nations out of the market as well as driving up people’s food bills and exacerbating hunger. But the latest research suggests that the picture is more complex. Energy is a linchpin for most of the SDGs, and research that merges climate, energy and the SDGs underscores this 1 . For example, the agriculture and food-transport sectors still depend on fossil fuels, and that generates pollution that kills millions of people each year. Other links are indirect: lack of access to light at night and to online information — as a result of energy poverty — hampers educational attainment and contributes to both long- and short-term inequality.
US aims for electric-car revolution — will it work?
The lesson from research is that it might be easier, not harder, to address these challenges together. In 2021, researcher Gabriela Iacobuţă at the German Institute of Development and Sustainability in Bonn and her colleagues showed that technologies centred on renewable resources and efficiency tend to come with few trade-offs and many benefits, including improved public health and wealth, thanks to a cleaner environment and better jobs 2 . And climate scientist Bjoern Soergel at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany and his colleagues found that a coordinated package of climate and development policies could achieve most of the SDGs while limiting global warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels 3 .
The study assessed 56 indicators across all 17 SDGs. One proposed intervention is an international climate finance mechanism that would levy fees on carbon emissions that would be redistributed through national programmes to reduce poverty. A second focuses on promoting healthy diets — including reducing the consumption of meat, the production of which requires a lot of water, energy and land. This would benefit people on low incomes by lowering both food and energy prices.
The biggest challenge lies in translating these models to the real world. To do so, we need leaders who are not bound by outmoded thinking, are aware of the latest science and can draw on the research to build public support for the necessary energy transition. We require more national and international public institutions that are willing to address problems at the system level. And all of this needs a science community that is willing and able to champion knowledge and evidence.
Nature 620 , 245 (2023)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-02510-y
Vohra, K. et al. Environ. Res. 195 , 110754 (2021).
Article PubMed Google Scholar
Iacobuţă, G. I., Höhne, N., van Soest, H. L. & Leemans, R. Sustainability 13 , 10774 (2021).
Article Google Scholar
Soergel, B. et al. Nature Clim. Change 11 , 656–664 (2021).
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IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The use of renewable energy resources, such as solar, wind, and biomass will not diminish their availability. Sunlight being a constant source of energy is used to meet the ever-increasing energy need. This review discusses the world's energy needs, renewable energy technologies for domestic use, and highlights public opinions on renewable energy. A systematic review of the literature was ...
The share of renewable energy can grow from 15% in 2015 to 63% of total primary energy supply in 2050 as this paper shows. Such renewables growth in combination with higher energy efficiency can provide 94% of the emissions reduction that is needed to stay within the limits of the Paris Climate Agreement.
According to IEA's global energy review in 2021, total renewable energy usage has shown a significant increment, from 4,098 TWh in 2010 to 7,627 TWh in 2020. Hydropower contributes the largest portion of renewable energy capacity around the world for electricity generation, even though the growth rate of hydropower is the lowest compared with ...
The global proliferation of renewable energy has been fueled by a combination of factors, spearheaded by proactive government policies. These include the implementation of renewable portfolio standards, the provision of feed-in tariffs, auction mechanisms, and the availability of tax credits [6].Such policies, along with dedicated initiatives to foster research and development, have cultivated ...
The aim of the paper is to ascertain if renewable energy sources are sustainable and examine how a shift from fossil fuel-based energy sources to renewable energy sources would help reduce climate change and its impact. ... energy efficiency, clean energy technology and research and energy infrastructure investment will reduce the cost of ...
Renewable energy is energy that comes from sources that are readily replenishable on short-timescales. Examples of these are solar radiation, wind, and biomass. Fibre-reinforced epoxy-amine resins ...
Since climate processes fuel most renewable energy resources, the impact of climate change on renewable energy supply has been identified as a key area for further research 7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15 ...
Renewable energy's share of total global energy consumption was just 19.1% in 2020, according to the latest UN tracking report, but one-third of that came from burning resources such as wood.
About the Journal. Purpose. The Journal of Energy Resources Technology, Part A: Sustainable and Renewable Energy disseminates technical information - peer-reviewed scholarly work, research papers, technical briefs, feature articles and authoritative review articles - of permanent interest to the journal's readership. Emphasis is given to conversion of any form of chemical, thermal and ...
The empirical findings were consistent with the prevailing literature that it has a positive impact on economic sustainable development because of renewable energy consumption. Kassim and Isik (Citation 2020) reviewed a summary of 24 research papers on energy and growth nexus. Among them, the mainstream papers confirm the significant ...