Since Paris, progress on low-carbon solutions and markets has been much faster than many realise. In 2015, low-carbon technologies and business models could rarely compete with incumbent high carbon solutions. Today in 2020, low-carbon solutions are competitive in sectors representing around 25% of emissions. By 2030, these solutions could be competitive in sectors representing 70% of global emissions. (See Exhibit 1.) A stealth revolution is today propelling us towards a zero-carbon, digital future. The second paragraph sounds promising, but there are a lot of qualifications. One is that the competitive 25% is for power generation, which is more amenable to carbon-free solutions than transportation, agriculture and manufacturing. The source is the New Energy Outlook 2020 which is not free but appears to say that solar/wind are cheaper for "new-build generation" i.e. comparing building a brand new fossil-fuel plant to building a new solar/wind facility. So if existing fossil fuel plants disappeared, it would be cheaper to start from scratch with solar/wind, but the nonrenewable sources would still have to be built to handle demand variation.In the years since the Paris Agreement, emissions have risen from 53 billion tonnes CO2e in 2015 to 55 billion tonnes. Even a severe COVID-driven contraction of the economy has barely changed this trajectory. The world is not on track to avoid dangerous, irreversible climate change. That is a key reality on which we need to act urgently and collectively. But it is not the whole story.
In 2015, solar and wind were expensive forms of generation. Today, just five years later, solar/wind are the cheapest form of new generation in countries representing over 70% of GDP.