“Preventing tipping points requires ‘frontloaded’ mitigation pathways that minimise peak global temperature, the duration of the overshoot period above 1.5°C, and the return time below 1.5°C. Sustainable carbon dioxide removal approaches need to be rapidly scaled up to achieve this.” The post We’ve reached the coral tipping point appeared first on Green Prophet.| Green Prophet
In MENA and Mediterranean markets we cover, solar fields now sit ready but under-connected, as grid modernisation lags behind flashy capacity announcements. The region — especially Gulf and North African economies — could play a major role in closing the global gap, but only if infrastructure catches up with ambition and clean tech manufacturing localises, rather than relying on fragile import chains. The post World Breaks Renewable Records — But Still Not Fast Enough to Meet 2030 Goal,...| Green Prophet
Wie die Welt das historische Verdreifachungsziel noch erreichen kann Die gute Nachricht zuerst: Die globale Energiewende nimmt Fahrt auf und ist auf der Überholspur. 582 Gigawatt neue erneuerbare Kapazitäten, dramatisch sinkende Kosten und Solarenergie im Rekordtempo – 2024 war ein Jahr der Superlative. Doch der neue IRENA-Report zeigt: Um das historische Ziel der COP28 zu […] Den gesamten Beitrag lesen: Energiewende auf der Überholspur.| Cleanthinking – Cleantech-Wirtschaftsmagazin
New analysis from IRENA has revealed the potential for green hydrogen to decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors in the Global South.| Enlit World
New analysis from IRENA has revealed the potential for green hydrogen to decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors in the Global South.| Power Engineering International
La compétitivité des énergies renouvelables s'est encore accélérée l'an dernier, renforcée par la crise des prix des combustibles fossiles.| Le Monde de l'Energie
New data shows Sweden, Australia, Netherlands, Germany and Denmark are the leading countries for per capita solar and wind generation capacity. Furthermore, it reveals global solar capacity has been doubling every three years, and wind every six years, whereas fossil and nuclear capacity and generation have been almost static in recent years.| pv magazine Australia