EU Roadmap: Clean Energy Future At No Extra Cost
Greenpeace reactive statement
Commission study
reveals irrelevance of coal and nuclear despite skewed
accounting
Brussels, 15 December 2011 – A roadmap published today by the European Commission exploring different energy pathways over the next 40 years has shown that an energy system based largely on renewables and efficiency will cost taxpayers no more than a system locking Europe into fossil fuels and nuclear energy, said Greenpeace. Renewables emerge as the dominant energy source, despite skewed calculations to keep nuclear energy and fossil fuels in the energy mix [1].
With much of Europe’s ageing energy system in need of an upgrade, the Commission has explored five pathways: one relying most on energy efficiency, one based on a mixture of technologies, one focussed on renewables, one on nuclear energy and one on coal and gas with carbon capture and storage. Overall investment costs (including electricity price, fuel costs, investments in energy efficiency and other structural costs) are forecast to be almost identical for all scenarios, including for business as usual.
The roadmap puts the share of renewables in total energy use by 2050 at between 55% (in the lowest scenario) and 75% (in the highest scenario) – up to 97% in the share of electricity consumption. In the high renewables scenario, nuclear power and fossil fuels are reduced to mere place-holders, accounting for under 1.5% and 1% respectively in total final energy use.
Greenpeace EU energy policy director
Frauke Thies said: “The roadmap shows that getting
clean energy from renewables will cost taxpayers no more
than getting dirty and dangerous energy from coal or nuclear
power. The Commission will be tempted to overplay the role
of coal and nuclear energy to appease the likes of Poland
and France, but the numbers in the roadmap are unequivocal.
It proves that a modern energy system can’t do without
renewables and efficiency, but can easily consign coal and
nuclear power to the past.”
Greenpeace
supports the Commission's call to consider renewable energy
objectives beyond 2020. “It is now up to the European
Parliament and EU governments to commit to binding targets
for renewables in 2030 and put Europe on a fast track to a
clean energy system,” added Thies.
Note:
[1] EU energy roadmap 2050 –
Greenpeace analysis: http://www.greenpeace.org/eu-unit/en/Publications/2011/2050-energy-roadmap/
This press release is also available on www.greenpeace.eu
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ENDS