The energy transition in five charts and not too many numbers

Climate Energy

The energy transition in five charts and not too many numbers

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The change underway is revolutionary, exponential and the 2020s is the decade that the shift becomes clear to all

The energy transition is driven by the exponential growth of renewables, and the key changes will happen by 2030.

1. The energy transition is a technology revolution

At the heart of the energy transition lies the fact that renewable technologies are far superior to fossil fuels. The energy transition is a shift from a concentrated, expensive, polluting commodity-based system with no learning curve, to an efficient, manufactured, technology-driven system that offers continuously falling costs and is available everywhere. It is moving from heavy, fiery molecules to light, obedient electrons; from hunting fossil fuels to farming the sun.

Like past technology shifts, it is a transformation, not merely a substitution. As RethinkX notes, this is not a brown caterpillar to a green caterpillar, but rather a caterpillar to a butterfly, which means different economics, geographies, winners and energy carriers. Just like past technology shifts, the falling costs of the new render the old obsolete.

2. The renewables revolution is exponential, not linear

When it comes to the renewables revolution, linear is the default perception, but exponential is the default reality. The growth of the key new energy technologies is exponential. It has been in the past, and it will continue to be for the foreseeable future. Companies and countries need to be quick to act, for it is hard to catch an exponential curve from behind.

3. The renewables revolution is led by China

Across manufacturing, deployment, and costs, China is far ahead of the rest of the world. As in past technology shifts, there is a geographical center that disseminates the superior technology around the world. If you wanted to understand the diffusion of the internet, you looked to and modeled the United States. If you want to understand the energy transition, you look to China.

China’s leadership creates a competitive race to the top, which can be seen in recently enacted policies in the United States and Europe.

4. This is the decade of change

The 2020s are the disruption decade, where renewable technology sales race up the S-curve. If the energy transition were a novel, this decade would be its climax.

The energy system is one of stocks (the bathtub) and flows (the dirty tap and the clean tap). By the end of the decade the clean tap will be on full and the dirty tap will be drying up. Heat pumps, electric vehicles, solar, and wind will all be near the top of their sales S-curves. Once the flow from the tap is clean, the drain (or natural retirement rates) will flush away the fossil system in succeeding decades.

5. By 2030 the debate will be very different

By 2030, renewables will dominate the sales of energy-producing and consuming technologies. The green prize will be evident. Cheap renewables will be even cheaper. Fossil fuel demand will be off the current plateau and in clear decline. The negative externalities of fossil fuels will be increasingly weaponized. Climate impacts will be more visible. In 2023, it is hard to imagine what this will look like, let alone model it in any detail.

The energy transition is a shift from a concentrated, expensive, polluting commodity-based system with no learning curve, to an efficient, manufactured, technology-driven system that offers continuously falling costs and is available everywhere.

This means we must do as much as we can to narrow our time horizons and focus on speeding up the deployment of key renewables. Four technologies (solar, wind, electric vehicles, and heat pumps), in four markets (China, the United States, the European Union, and India), over the next four years, set the direction. Meanwhile it is vital for other locations and technologies to get onto a similar path.

This report was first published on May 3, 2023 by RMI, a nonprofit organization working to accelerate the energy transition.

Written by

Sam Butler-Sloss and Kingsmill Bond

Sam is an associate in the Strategy Team at Rocky Mountain Institute. He contributes to research on the global energy transition. Kingsmill Bond is a senior principal in the Strategy Team. His role is to write research on the energy transition narrative, with a focus on financial market participants.