There is broad consensus that renewable energies should have a
much more important role in energy systems than they currently have.
Current market frameworks and other coordination mechanisms result in lower than desirable
renewable energy shares. Therefore, a deliberate renewable energy
promotion policy is required.These are some of the most important
arguments for an active renewable energy promotion policy that are valid for all countries, though to varying degrees:
- The current level of renewable energy in most countries is even
lower than would be economically efficient at today's market prices.
As newcomers, renewable energy technologies (RET) face a series of market barriers.
- Many analysts are convinced that the long-term resource
scarcity fossil energy faces is still not entirely
priced-in. If current prices of fossil fuels reflected their
scarcity this correctly,
RET would become more competitive.
- The prices of fossil fuels are highly volatile due to short-term
changes and incidences in the world's energy markets. Renewables are generally local
energies and, as such, provide diversification of the energy mix with a security
premium. It is widely agreed that renewables should have a higher share
for
energy security reasons in the energy
portfolio in particular in oil and gas importing countries.
- The use of fossil fuels is, to varying degrees, damaging to the
human health and the local environment. The reduction of these impacts by technical
means increases the cost of fossil fuel use. Negative environmental
effects (externalities) must be internalised, i.e. reflected in the energy price. All this improves the competitive
position of renewable energy technologies.
- Renewable energy technologies offer prospects for a dynamic industrial policy. In
industrialised economies plagued by unemployment and reduced growth
perspectives, as well as in some developing countries, RET have
proven to be an option of developing industries with a future.
- The deployment of RET in rural areas
in developing countries
offers opportunities for the use of local
natural resources, for employment, and ultimately for institutional capacity. RET can
be effective in achieving the Millennium Development Goals as
illustrated with many examples in the REN21
issue paper Energy
for Development.
In addition, fossil fuels have a negative impact on global
environmental goods that renewables do not have. RET arguably constitute
the most significant instrument to help bring down the global carbon emissions
curve, as discussed in the REN21
issue paper
Changing Climates. For some countries, though, the shared but
differentiated responsibilities vis-à-vis global externalities seems
not to be the primary concern. For this situation, the international community
has established funds like the Global Environment Facility (
GEF) and
support schemes such as the
flexible mechanisms of the Kyoto Protocol. It
would be wise to structure
the national RE policy in a way that allows the country
to benefit from instruments such as Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
or Joint Implementation (JI), and from carbon finance markets in general.
Recommended Reading:
Rationale for Renewable Energies, Thematic
Background Paper of renewabels 2004,
by José Goldemberg
RE Rationale in
World
Bank REToolKit