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Coal phase-out pledges follow peak coal : evidence from 60 years of growth and decline in coal power capacity worldwide

Lægreid, Ole Martin ; Cherp, Aleh LU and Jewell, Jessica (2023) In Oxford Open Energy 2.
Abstract

Transitioning to net-zero carbon emissions requires phasing-out unabated coal power; however, recently it has only been declining in some countries, while it stagnated or even increased in others. Where and under what circumstances, has coal capacity reached its peak and begun to decline? We address this question with an empirical analysis of coal capacity in 56 countries, accounting for 99% of coal generation in the world. The peaks in national coal power have been equally spread per decade since 1970. The peaks are more likely to occur in country-years with high levels of electoral democracy, higher GDP per capita, slower electricity demand growth, and with low levels of political corruption. Normally, peaking coal power preceded... (More)

Transitioning to net-zero carbon emissions requires phasing-out unabated coal power; however, recently it has only been declining in some countries, while it stagnated or even increased in others. Where and under what circumstances, has coal capacity reached its peak and begun to decline? We address this question with an empirical analysis of coal capacity in 56 countries, accounting for 99% of coal generation in the world. The peaks in national coal power have been equally spread per decade since 1970. The peaks are more likely to occur in country-years with high levels of electoral democracy, higher GDP per capita, slower electricity demand growth, and with low levels of political corruption. Normally, peaking coal power preceded rather than followed political coal phase-out pledges, often with long time lags. We conclude that though the cost of coal alternatives are declining and concerns over climate change increasing, coal power does not automatically peak even in situations with low demand growth, aging power plants and high import dependence. A quick and decisive destabilization of coal regimes requires, in addition, having sufficient economic capacities and strong democratic governance.

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author
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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Oxford Open Energy
volume
2
article number
oiad009
publisher
Oxford University Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85182371920
ISSN
2752-5082
DOI
10.1093/ooenergy/oiad009
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
43bb15c8-4ca8-4c71-967d-c4d47dc14a5d
date added to LUP
2024-01-27 10:58:29
date last changed
2024-01-29 13:35:31
@article{43bb15c8-4ca8-4c71-967d-c4d47dc14a5d,
  abstract     = {{<p>Transitioning to net-zero carbon emissions requires phasing-out unabated coal power; however, recently it has only been declining in some countries, while it stagnated or even increased in others. Where and under what circumstances, has coal capacity reached its peak and begun to decline? We address this question with an empirical analysis of coal capacity in 56 countries, accounting for 99% of coal generation in the world. The peaks in national coal power have been equally spread per decade since 1970. The peaks are more likely to occur in country-years with high levels of electoral democracy, higher GDP per capita, slower electricity demand growth, and with low levels of political corruption. Normally, peaking coal power preceded rather than followed political coal phase-out pledges, often with long time lags. We conclude that though the cost of coal alternatives are declining and concerns over climate change increasing, coal power does not automatically peak even in situations with low demand growth, aging power plants and high import dependence. A quick and decisive destabilization of coal regimes requires, in addition, having sufficient economic capacities and strong democratic governance.</p>}},
  author       = {{Lægreid, Ole Martin and Cherp, Aleh and Jewell, Jessica}},
  issn         = {{2752-5082}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Oxford University Press}},
  series       = {{Oxford Open Energy}},
  title        = {{Coal phase-out pledges follow peak coal : evidence from 60 years of growth and decline in coal power capacity worldwide}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ooenergy/oiad009}},
  doi          = {{10.1093/ooenergy/oiad009}},
  volume       = {{2}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}