How to move to 100 percent renewables by 2030
Mark Delucchi and Mark Jacobson, professors at the University of California-Davis and Stanford University, have developed a roadmap of sorts for moving away from coal and oil.
The roadmap is largely theoretical; U.S. lawmakers are struggling to pass legislation that would require 20 percent of the country’s electricity to come from renewable sources, and efforts to pass a broad climate bill have collapsed. But the team’s research has provided one of the first pictures of exactly what it might take to rely fully on renewable energy.
Despite the hurdles, they say it’s possible. “Technically you can do it. It really depends on will power,” Jacobson told National Geographic.
But “will power,” as Jacobson put it, may prove tricky to find this year in the United States. The report comes as Congress is struggling to address a variety of important energy issues and the renewable industry says it is struggling to grow without consistent policies.
At the same time, U.S. lawmakers are growing increasingly worried about the role China is playing in clean-energy technology. The issue is expected to be a major topic of discussion during Chinese President Hu Jintao’s visit to the White House this week.
The article has been corrected to indicate that the study focused on the entire world’s energy infrastructure.
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