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    GWEC report says wind industry needs to be 10 times bigger by 2050

    The Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) launched its Global Wind Report for 2022 earlier this week, highlighting some of its key insights, industry challenges, as well as an outlook for wind energy globally. The report's lead authors are Joyce Lee, head of policy and projects, and Feng Zhao, head of strategy and market intelligence at GWEC.
    Source: Gallo/Getty
    Source: Gallo/Getty

    In his opening remarks, GWEC CEO Ben Backwell noted that in order to meet global net-zero targets, the wind industry needs to be 10 times bigger than it currently is in terms of cumulative installations by 2050. While 2021 came very close to the record year achieved in 2020, it still fell short of industry expectations.

    Backwell was optimistic though, saying that the organisation is very confident that in the next 3-4 years the industry is going to see a significant acceleration in demand. "We are in a situation where the possibilities and the opportunities for growth are almost limitless," he said.

    Permitting needs to be prioritised

    A top priority in terms of challenges, he noted, is around permitting, and while governments have recognised that urgent measures need to be taken to address this problem, real action is needed on the ground. "There's no point in just having what I call 'target inflation' of just creating bigger and bigger targets if we're not going to let companies build that capacity."

    He also pointed out that much more auctioning is needed in order for investment to flow into the market. "There's actually a massive overhang of investment wanting to come into this sector which is not able to deploy because the projects are not developing fast enough or there's not enough projects available," Backwell said.

    Key insights from the report include:


    • The global wind industry had its second-best year in 2021 with almost 94GW of capacity added globally, trailing behind 2020’s record growth by only 1.8%.
    • Europe, Latin America and Africa & Middle East had record years for new onshore installations, but total onshore wind installations in 2021 was still 18% lower than the previous year. The decline was driven primarily by the slow-down of onshore wind growth in the world’s two largest wind power markets, China and the US.
    • 21.1GW of offshore wind capacity was commissioned last year, three times more than in 2020, making 2021 the best year in offshore wind history, bringing its market share in global new installations to 22.5% in 2021.
    • China made up 80% of offshore wind capacity added worldwide in 2021, bringing its cumulative offshore wind installations to 27.7GW. Notably, it took three decades for Europe to bring its total offshore wind capacity to a similar level.
    • Total global wind power capacity is now up to 837GW, helping the world avoid over 1.2 billion tonnes of CO2 annually – equivalent to the annual carbon emissions of South America.
    • Wind auction activities bounced back in 2021 with more than 88GW of wind capacity awarded globally, 153% higher than in 2020.

    Scaling up wind installations

    GWEC's Joyce Lee shared the short- and long-term outlook for wind energy globally.

    While the world is increasingly moving towards the shared goal of net-zero emissions by 2050, she said that countries with strong targets and clear plans only cover about 10% of global GDP and 5% of emissions worldwide.

    "This policy gap in part explains why wind energy installations are not yet aligned with global net-zero targets," said Lee. "Our current rates of growth are only on track to meet just less than 2000GW of cumulative installed capacity by 2030 and that means we would be only two-thirds of where we need to be to be on track by the end of this decade for a 1.5°C global warming pathway."

    She said that wind installations needed to be scaled up by around four times from 2021's 94GW mark to 390GW by 2030 in order to get back on track.

    Prominent challenge areas for growth

    Looking at some of the multidimensional challenges to wind development, the report highlights six main areas: system design, society, supply chain, technology, infrastructure, and workforce. Based on a global survey with renewable energy associations, the report found that the short- and long-term challenges tended to converge in the system design and society areas.

    "In addition to grid and infrastructure needs... issues like the social and economic proposition of wind versus coal and gas, market design for pricing and procurement, permitting challenges, social acceptance, the availability of land and sea bed... are all prominent challenge areas for growth and the report provides numerous recommendations for policymakers in these areas which can help to implement more suitable market signals and incentives for wind and help to build social consensus on the transition," said Lee.

    Confronting geopolitical, supply chain challenges

    She also noted that cooperation was key in confronting the current geopolitical and supply chain challenges. The prices of critical materials in the wind supply chain, such as steel and copper as well as rare earth elements, have skyrocketed during the industrial recovery from Covid-19 and still further since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, significantly impacting the cost calculations for wind energy, said Lee.

    "Securing the supply chain for wind in the future will mean not only revenue stabilisation mechanisms for offtake, which can help to smooth out revenue distribution across the value chain, but also new public-private partnerships and innovations which can help to build strategic stockpiles for critical materials, find alternatives to these materials, identify other geographic sources for them, and then commercial the recycling stream so we can improve circularity," she said.

    Download the full Global Wind Report 2022 here.

    About Sindy Peters

    Sindy Peters (@sindy_hullaba_lou) is a group editor at Bizcommunity.com on the Construction & Engineering, Energy & Mining, and Property portals. She can be reached at moc.ytinummoczib@ydnis.
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