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© OECD/IEA 2013 5 th Clean Energy Ministerial, Seoul, Korea 12 May 2014 Maria van der Hoeven Executive Director, International Energy Agency Tracking Clean Energy Progress
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Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

Aug 22, 2014

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Environment

Tracking Clean Energy Progress 2014 examines progress in the development and deployment of key clean energy technologies. This Energy Technology Perspectives 2014 (ETP 2014) excerpt tracks each technology and sector against interim 2025 targets in the IEA 2014 Energy Technology Perspectives 2°C scenario, which lays out pathways to a sustainable energy system in 2050.
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Page 1: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

5th Clean Energy Ministerial, Seoul, Korea

12 May 2014

Maria van der Hoeven

Executive Director, International Energy Agency

Tracking Clean Energy Progress

Page 2: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Carbon Intensity of supply is stuck

The political will to make meaningful progress at a global scale has yet to be demonstrated

Page 3: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Tracking short-term actions for long-term goals

All technologies are needed to transform the global energy system

0

20

40

60

2011 2020 2030 2040 2050

End-use fuel and electricity efficiency 38% CCS 14% End-use fuel switching 9% Renewables 30% Power generation efficiency and fuel switching 2%

6DS

2DS

Page 4: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Reaching the goal is cost effective

USD 44 trillion additional cost of decarbonising the energy system is offset by over USD 115 trillion in fuel savings

Page 5: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Not on track

Renewable power

Smart grids

Gas-fired power

Nuclear power

Coal-fired power

Carbon capture and storage

Industry

Biofuels

Buildings

Transport

Electric and Hybrid electric vehicles

Co-generation and district heating and cooling

Page 6: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Still on track in Renewables…

Emerging economies step up clean energy ambition, but momentum stalls in OECD countries

Total renewable power generation

Page 7: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

…but coal use is also rising

Unabated coal use in electricity generation is incompatible with 2DS objectives

Page 8: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Efficiency and the need to curb energy demand in buildings...

Despite a recent contraction in the building industry in several countries – energy consumption continues to rise.

Buildings electricity consumption

Page 9: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

…Industry…

Energy intensity is falling but increased production has offset efficiency improvements

Industry energy intensity

Page 10: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

... And mobility

Fuel economy solutions on ICEs can deliver the largest

fuel savings in the short term.

Page 11: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Harnessing Electricity’s Potential

Increasing electricity consumption and share of overall energy usage demands our attention – for ALL forward

looking scenarios

Global Electricity demand

Page 12: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

Systems thinking and integration

A sustainable electricity system is a smarter, multidirectional and integrated energy system that

requires long-term planning for services delivery

Page 13: Tracking Clean Energy Progress Report

© OECD/IEA 2013

5th Clean Energy Ministerial, Seoul, Korea

12 May 2014

Maria van der Hoeven

Executive Director, International Energy Agency

Tracking Clean Energy Progress