As Tom Randall reports for Bloomberg Business, the switch actually happened in 2013, when we added 143 gigawatts of renewable electricity capacity, as opposed to just 141 gigawatts of fossil fuel capacity. And things are only going to get better. The analysis, which was presented at the annual Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) summit, predicted that by 2030, more than four times more renewable electricity capacity will be added than fossil fuel potential, despite current oil prices
"The electricity system is shifting to clean," founder of BNEF, Michael Liebreich, said in his keynote address. "Despite the change in oil and gas prices there is going to be a substantial build-out of renewable energy that is likely to be an order of magnitude larger than the build-out of coal and gas."
The graphs below show the reports' predictions for energy capacity addition over the coming decades, with solar coming out the clear winner.
In the United States, a city in Texas is about to switch over to 100 percent renewable energy. As Bec Crew reported for ScienceAlert last month, the decision wasn't an altruistic one: "Coal is simply getting too expensive, and the desert state is running out of the water needed to extract power from it".
Costa Rica even managed to power itself entirely with renewable energy for the first 75 days of this year, and China's wind farms now produce more energy than America's nuclear power plants. According to a 2014 report by the International Energy Agency, solar could very well become the world's single biggest source of electricity by 2050.
However, the BNEF report also showed that progress might be a little slower, unless the world increases its investment in renewables. Still, for once it's a question of when, not if, and that's a nice change.
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