Renewable Energy Investments Grew by 17 Percent in 2011, Reports Say

Yale Environment 360Published on Date June 12th, 2012 by Yale Environment 360
Posted in Category Finance, Category Renewables
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A surge in investment in renewable energy in India, coupled with strong green energy growth in the U.S. and China, led to a 17 percent global surge in alternative energy investments last year, according to reports by the United Nations Environment Program and another organization.

Robust investment in solar power helped India’s investment in green energy grow 62 percent last year, to $12 billion, the reports said. U.S. investments in renewable energy, dominated by solar power, totaled $51 billion last year, just $1 billion behind China’s $52 billion in alternative energy investments.

Despite plummeting prices for natural gas and a decline in subsidies for renewable energy investments in fiscally strapped developed countries, total global investments in renewable energy in 2011 reached a record $257 billion, nearly double the total five years ago, according to the reports.

Even excluding large hydroelectric projects, renewable energy investment represented roughly one-third of new power generation installed in 2011.

Article appearing courtesy Yale Environment 360.


photo: USDAgov.

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One Comment to “Renewable Energy Investments Grew by 17 Percent in 2011, Reports Say”

  • Habib Bahari says:

    I have developed a new wind renewable energy technology which is designed to be used in urban/city environment, it is called the Wind Tower. This has generated so much excitement among people who have seen a working prototype. Several universities and academies are looking to set up one. Unfortunately the US renewable energy venture capitalists are not aggressive enough to push new technologies into the markets in order to speed up new technologies.

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