The Reality Check: Climate Techno-fixes and the Road to Net Zero

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has updated its road map for combating climate change, emphasizing the need to swiftly transition to renewable energy while minimizing reliance on unproven technologies such as carbon capture and hydrogen fuels. The report highlights that emerging technologies have not lived up to the hype and now play a smaller role in emissions reductions. Hydrogen production is seen as more of a climate problem than a solution, while electric charging infrastructure is growing rapidly. The road map also reduces the projected role of carbon capture technologies. The report underscores the urgency of tripling global renewable power capacity by 2030 and doubling energy efficiency, while the world's wealthiest countries need to reach net-zero emissions ahead of the 2050 target.
- Techno-fixes to climate change aren't living up to the hype The Verge
- ‘Staggering’ green growth gives hope for 1.5C, says global energy head The Guardian
- Fossil fuel demand must fall by a quarter by 2030 to limit global warming, IEA says Financial Times
- IEA Says Route to Net Zero Requires More Cash and Less Politics U.S. News & World Report
- Peak Oil Is Near, Energy Agency Says, but Climate Change Is Far From Solved The New York Times
- View Full Coverage on Google News
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