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Explorer
Renewable Energy Technologies
Technology Analyst: Susan Leiby
Phone: +1-650-859-4855
Fax: +1-650-859-4544
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Viewpoints
About This Technology
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Viewpoints
  2008
June - Commercialization of New Biofuels Technologies
May - Ocean-Energy Technology-Commercialization Activity
April - Expanding Opportunities for Geothermal Power
March - Sustainability and the Future of Biofuels
February - Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaics: Opportunities
 
  2007
Dec/Jan - 2007: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2008
November - The Emerging Market for Bioplastics
October - Recent Developments: Companies Plan to Build New Solar-Thermal-Power Plants • Archer-Daniels Midland and ConocoPhillips Collaborate on Biofuels • England Gives Approval for Wave Hub Project • Geothermal Lease Auction Signals New U.S. Development Ahead
September - Energy-Storage Opportunities for Renewable Technologies
Announcement: Explorer Technology Area Virtual Environments Becomes Virtual Worlds
August - New-Generation PV Technologies
July - New Biofuel Technologies
New Technology Area: User Interfaces
June - Wind Energy Markets Continue to See Rapid Growth
May - Positive Growth Outlook for Geothermal Power
April - U.S. Accelerates Funding for New Renewable Energy Technologies
Recent Developments: EU Agrees to Slash Greenhouse-Gas Emissions by 2020
March - Ocean-Energy Technology: Near Commercialization
February - Island Community Strategies for Renewable Energy
 
  2006
Dec/Jan - 2006: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2007
November - The 2005 World Market for Renewable Energy Technologies



About This Technology

Modern renewable energy technologies are becoming mainstream in many energy markets because they offer increasingly viable and sustainable alternatives to today's dominant fossil-fuel (coal, oil, and natural gas) and nuclear technologies. Scientists are making advances in a broad range of renewable technologies for power production, transport fuels, and heating and cooling. Renewable technologies draw on continuously replenished energy resources—including heat and light from the sun, wind, biomass, falling water, heat from inside the earth, and ocean energy. These resources are typically large and dispersed, and their energy is often convertible with little environmental impact, including low- and no-carbon emissions.

Although renewable energy technologies are small contributors to energy markets today, the sector is growing rapidly in response to a confluence of critical drivers. Drivers include strong growth in world energy demand—particularly in developing countries, environmental concerns about pollution and global warming, the desire to increase energy security and diversity, rising fossil-fuel prices, and technology advances that are improving the performance and lowering the costs of renewable energy systems. A large-scale move to renewable energy is not a certainty, even in a high-oil-price environment, but government policies worldwide are playing a vital role in helping to advance renewable technologies and lower market barriers. More than 70 countries now provide some type of renewable energy–promotion policy, and the policies in the most aggressive countries such as Germany have proved extremely successful. Some technologies, such as large-scale wind, biomass, geothermal, and small hydropower are increasingly competitive even without subsidies. In recognition of these developments, a growing number of large industrial companies, financial institutions, and venture-capital–funded start-ups are rushing to develop market opportunities for renewable energy technologies.

Global annual investment into renewable energy technologies reached a record $100 billion in 2006. Growth opportunities for renewable energy producers and distributors in both industrialized and developing countries depend on specific local conditions—the renewable energy resource base, government support and energy economics, market factors, and institutional constraints. Grid-connected solar photovoltaic technology is the fastest-growing energy technology worldwide, creating opportunities for materials, component, and system suppliers for both silicon and nonsilicon thin-film technologies. Prospects are also bright for wind-turbine manufacturers in a growing number of countries as costs drop and utility companies invest in huge wind parks to meet renewable energy requirements. Biofuels producers and their suppliers have considerable opportunities to expand in the United States, Brazil, Europe, China, and other countries that are encouraging the use of biofuels in transportation fuels. Geothermal heating and power markets are poised for major growth in many countries, and small hydropower applications have significant potential to meet future energy needs, especially in developing countries. Ocean-tidal and wave-energy technologies are just beginning to reach commercialization but have even greater long-term potential than hydropower and offshore wind power. All these technologies have the potential to offer clean new sources of energy, provide economic-development opportunities, and improve the standard of living for people in rural areas. As more countries embrace the idea of large-scale renewable energy technology use, however, stakeholders also need to recognize and assess the trade-offs—economic, environmental, and social— associated with each technology—trade-offs such as land-management issues.



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