Renewable Energy Investments Soar
$71 Billion Invested In 2006, Up 43 Percent From 2005, U.N. Says
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A vessel sails towards a wind farm off the coast of Whitstable on the north Kent coast in southeastern England. A new U.N. report says investments in renewable energy soared last year. (AP Photo/David Bebber, Pool)
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Fears about global warming, frustration over high oil prices and growing backing from governments have lured more investment money to renewable energy sources like wind, solar power and biofuels, the U.N. Environment Program said. About a fifth of 2006 investment was in the developing world.
Today renewable energy accounts for only 2 percent of the electricity around the world, however, the report said. Renewable energy makes up 18 percent of the world's investment in generating power.
The trend report analyzed venture capital, the stock market and acquisitions, studying how investment money on renewable energy is being spent around the world. Though high oil prices are helping drive interest in renewable technologies, the field is growing more independent of fossil fuel prices.
"One of the new and fundamental messages of this report is that renewable energies are no longer subject to the vagaries of rising and falling oil prices," UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said. "They are becoming generating systems of choice for increasing numbers of power companies, communities and countries irrespective of the costs of fossil fuels."
After $71 billion invested last year, the report forecast $85 billion in new capital pouring into the sector in 2007.
Investment through public markets more than doubled in 2006 to reach $10.3 billion, it said. The biggest growth has been in venture capital and private equity investments, which hit $7.1 billion in 2006, more than twice as much as the previous year.
Developing countries are getting deeper into the renewable energy business, the report found. Investment in the developing world made up 21 percent of the total last year.
Nine percent of worldwide investment took place in China, where large reliance on coal is a world environmental concern and where the lack of oil in its territory is helping motivate efforts to find other energy sources. India is slightly behind China, while Latin America amounted to 5 percent of investment. Sub-Saharan Africa lags, but there is nonetheless interest there.
"The growth in the number of countries who are talking to us about renewables — it's just unbelievable how that's kind of ballooned in the last 12 to 18 months," said Nick Gardiner, the director of energy at Fortis Bank and a member of the advisory board of UNEP's Sustainable Energy Finance Initiative.
"There's a lot of liquidity around, there's a lot greater understanding of projects now ... renewables is very much considered a mainstream activity, so investors are interested and looking."
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- But to think that man has either the resources or the technology to stop or even reverse these cycles is a ridiculous notion held by uneducated narrow minded individuals.
Posted by CharlesDJohn at 07:20 AM : Jun 21, 2007
Oh okay. So don't bother trying right? You must be a republican with such a narrow minded, uneducated view of things. - Reply to this comment
- Doesn%u2019t anybody think, if human beings continue to deplete the oil and water resources we will not have a global warming. It%u2019s no secret that the center of the earth is extremely hot and what you think is the radiator system. Say, Oil and Water. And you will be correct. Granted part to blame for the global warming is the ozone to do our pollutions. Human beings have set out to destroy themselves.
- Reply to this comment
- The average temperature of planet Earth has cycled from cooler to warmer since it's birth. Yes, the planet is warming. Yes, it will eventually cool again. And finally, Yes, mans presence on the planet is playing a small and probably insignificant part in increasing the warming cycle, it will also play a small and insignificant part in slowing the cooling cycle. But to think that man has either the resources or the technology to stop or even reverse these cycles is a ridiculous notion held by uneducated narrow minded individuals.
- Reply to this comment
- want to do some investing in renewable energy on your own?
check this out:
http://home.altenergystore.com/ - Reply to this comment
The National Academy of Sciences surveyed every published, peer-reviewed global warming study done in the last 10 years. EVERY one of them agreed on three fundamental facts:
1) Global warming is real.
2) Global warming is caused by man.
3) The consequences of global warming will be catastrophic.- Reply to this comment




