IRENA Members See Hydropower at the Heart of Climate Action
Newsletter
Hydropower is the largest source of renewable electricity worldwide and advancing its deployment is essential in driving the energy transition forward. This week’s High-Level Meeting of IRENA’s Collaborative Framework on Hydropower brought together decision-makers with insights on hydropower to facilitate exchange of knowledge and identify concrete actions that allows hydropower to fulfil its role as an enabler of the decarbonisation of energy systems.
The meeting took place on the sidelines of the World Hydropower Congress hosted by the Government of Costa Rica. With more than 150 attendees from 42 countries, the virtual meeting witnessed a high level of engagement to take advantage of the knowledge and expertise that exists within IRENA and its global Membership. The session was moderated by Mr. Jean-Christophe Fueeg, Head of International Energy Affairs at the Swiss Federal Office of Energy, and one of the co-facilitators of the Framework together with Costa Rica.
In his opening remarks, @IRENA DG @flacamera highlights the role of #hydropower in #energytransition, and the need for increasing the pace at which it is deployed.
— IRENA (@IRENA) September 22, 2021
"Hydropower capacity will need to more than double by 2050, in order for the #ParisAgreement goals to be achieved." pic.twitter.com/ygwXrZo0OY
Providing the opening remarks, IRENA’s Director-General Francesco La Camera said: “We have to urgently step up action on all fronts of the energy transition to achieve the climate and sustainable development goals. Hydropower has a key role to play, enabling the integration of increasingly large shares of variable renewables and providing climate resilience.” Indeed, the Agency’s World Energy Transitions Outlook confirms that a climate safe 1.5C pathway would require 2,900 GW of installed hydropower capacity by 2050 – more than double of the installed capacity today.
In his scene-setting speech, the Former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull added: “The need for long-duration energy storage is the ignored technological crisis within the climate crisis. The only proved low-carbon technology for storing electricity for longer periods is hydropower. We need substantially more wind, solar and hydropower.”
Alejandro Moreno, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Renewable Power, U.S. Department of @Energy says "We have a goal of reaching a fully decarbonised power sector by 2035" and emphasises the need for long duration energy storage such as #PumpedStorageHydro. pic.twitter.com/rbfbEEfXff
— IHA | hydropower.org 🏞💦⚡️ (@iha_org) September 22, 2021
▪️Olade's Executive Secretary, Alfonso Blanco, is currently participating in the High-level Meeting of the Collaborative Framework on Hydropower, organized by IRENA. pic.twitter.com/EImKMCMtwG
— OLADE (@OLADEORG) September 22, 2021
The event featured a high-level expert panel comprised by representatives of the African Union, the Latin American Energy Organization, the United States Department of Energy and the World Bank.
The panel discussed some of the most pressing needs for hydropower including the need to ensure sustainability, to quickly secure large investments to deploy new capacity and refurbish a large share of today’s aging fleet, and the need for new business models and market frameworks that adequately reward the full range of services provided by hydropower beyond power generation.
Member countries echoed the points highlighted in the panel, recognizing hydropower as a fundamental pillar of the clean energy transition and critical to the achievement of the Paris Agreement’s goals, and highlighting the role of IRENA as a hub for knowledge and best practices, as well as in enabling international cooperation.
IHA Chief Executive @eddierich1, expresses two key takeaways from the San José Declaration: "Sustainable hydropower is a clean, green, modern and affordable solution to climate change", and "going forward the only acceptable form of hydropower is sustainable hydropower" pic.twitter.com/omAw6lcux5
— IHA | hydropower.org 🏞💦⚡️ (@iha_org) September 22, 2021
Concluding the session, the International Hydropower Association CEO Eddie Rich urged countries to take action and join efforts to ensure the increased deployment of hydropower and support efforts such as the San José Declaration on Sustainable Hydropower.