China and India will be the biggest recipients for new investment in power-generating capacity by 2040, representing a $4 trillion opportunity for the energy sector.
China will require $2.8 trillion of spending for 2,547 gigawatts of new capacity, while India needs $1.2 trillion, according to a Bloomberg New Energy Finance outlook forecasting how energy markets will evolve by 2040. China’s wind and solar capacity will increase eightfold through to 2040, retaining the nation’s role as a global powerhouse of clean energy.
The London-based research company also found:
China’s coal capacity will peak in 2024 due to stricter standards for new projects and cheaper renewables.
Renewables will attract 73 percent of the new investment spent over the next 23 years in China. Renewable capacity will account for 63 percent of the nation’s overall mix in 2040, compared with 33 percent last year.
China’s electricity demand will almost double by 2040, while the electricity intensity of economic growth falls by 35 percent as the nation shifts away from an industry-heavy growth model.
India’s coal additions will be at a near-hiatus from 2023 to 2028. From 2029, new coal will be needed to meet rising demand. Even so, with an explosion in solar installations, coal is set to no longer play a dominant role in the growth of India’s power-generating capacity by 2040.
India’s cumulative solar PV capacity rises from 10 gigawatts in 2016 to 670 gigawatts in 2040.
Coal’s share in India’s total capacity mix falls from 59 percent in 2016 to 17 percent in 2040.
From 2029, India’s widespread use of renewables will decouple economic growth from emissions. Zero-carbon sources will provide more than half of India’s electricity needs in 2040.
India will become the Asia-Pacific’s largest consumer of gas in 2038, reorienting liquefied natural gas trade.