Sept. 5, 2012: Annual Distributed Renewable Energy Installations to Triple by 2017
BOULDER, Colo. — Distributed renewable energy installations today represent far less than one percent of total worldwide electricity generating capacity, but according to a new report from Pike Research, a part of Navigant’s Energy Practice, they will expand rapidly over the next half-decade. Annual worldwide installations of renewable distributed generation are forecast to nearly triple between 2012 and 2017, reaching 63.5 gigawatts (GW) a year in 2017. Nearly 232 GW of distributed renewable is expected to be added over that five-year period.
The centralized model of power generation, transmission, and distribution is growing more and more costly to maintain at current levels, let alone expand to meet the rising electricity needs of growing populations, said Pike Research. Despite being smaller in scale, renewable distributed energy generation sources such as distributed solar photovoltaic (PV), small wind power, and stationary fuel cell systems, with less need for transmission and little to no emissions, are positioned to disrupt the traditional model.