NYT: Don’t Look Now, but the Green Transition Is Still Happening – Gift link

NYT: Don’t Look Now, but the Green Transition Is Still Happening – Gift link

As I often tell anyone within listening distance, the transition to renewables continues to grow and expand, and is unstoppable. That’s not to say that the lies, rhetoric and strong-armed tactics of the Trump administration and its climate change dismissive acolytes aren’t reversing some of the momentum and influencing policies around the world, or that the transition is happening fast enough, because it’s not, even in the remotest sense. But it’s not all doom and gloom either. David Wallace-Wells writes:

In January, a total of seven gas-powered cars were sold in all of Norway. This year, Pakistan expects that parts of the country will get more electricity from decentralized rooftop solar than from its entire electricity grid during parts of the day. In the United States, where we often tell ourselves we are in the grips of climate backlash and fossil fuel retrenchment, Texas has been setting new solar records through frigid February, around 90 percent of all new power capacity installed anywhere in the nation last year was green, and the share of renewables is expected to be even higher next year. The new “breakout star” of the battery world is the notorious petrostate Saudi Arabia, the countries with the biggest growth in solar power are concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa, and Australia’s breakneck pursuit of clean energy too cheap to meter is so far along that electricity prices in some regions have fallen by a third in a single year. 

Gift link.

It might just be the sun shining outside today, which always manages, even if only briefly, to renew a sense of optimism. Today, like Wallace-Wells, it’s transition optimism.


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2 Comments NYT: Don’t Look Now, but the Green Transition Is Still Happening – Gift link

  1. Tamara Enz

    Norwegians may not be buying gas-powered cars but much of their wealth comes from the oil and gas that they continue to export. It’s not as altruistic as it appears. Sorry to blow away some of the optimism, but it’s important to look across the spectrum of activities.

    Reply
    1. Bob Ramsak

      Absolutely. I’m not accusing Norway of altruism. 🙂 And China continues to build coal plants at a record clip. But things are still moving in the right direction, in spite of the forces trying to reverse the momentum, which is the point Wallace-Wells is making here.

      Reply

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