Paul kindly notes,

> Fossil fuels were caught in the pincer movement of falling demand and rising
> renewables. Coal generation bore the brunt of the pressure, falling by 30%
> year-on-year (-38 TWh). Gas was unable to capitalize on coal’s demise and 
> suffered
> losses as well (-3 TWh). Coal-to-gas switching quickly gave way to a wide
> grey-to-green shift. Thanks to recovering hydro output and record high wind
> generation, renewable energy sources had a very successfulquarter, expanding 
> by 38
> TWh year-on-year and reaching a 40% share in the power mix, their highest 
> quarterly
> figure to date. Not even nuclear energy was spared by the weakening demandand
> rock-bottom wholesale prices. Reactors in Sweden, France and other countries 
> had to
> be taken offline or significantly ramped down. All in all, renewable 
> generators were
> the least affected by the crisis and came out of it relatively unscathed.

And, all this flogging of a dying horse ...

“Fossil fuels get four-times more Covid stimulus than renewables, report says”

New analysis of Australia’s Covid-19 economic response has found that 
Australian governments have funnelled four-times more financial support into 
the fossil fuel sector, than they have allocated to clean energy.

The analysis, published by the Energy Policy Tracker, estimated that across all 
G20 countries since the outbreak of Covid-19, that $A216 billion of public 
funds had been poured into the fossil fuel sector.

This was almost twice the amount of financial support that had been provided to 
the clean energy sector, with the analysis finding that just $A 127 billion had 
been provided towards supporting the growth of renewables, energy efficiency 
and electric vehicles.

Australia was a particularly strong contributor to the fossil fuels, with $A686 
million in financial support provided to the sector since the beginning of the 
COVID19 pandemic, compared to just $A174 million to clean energy projects.

Most of this support has been directed towards the oil and gas industry, which 
has seen global prices plummet as a result of a dramatic decrease in demand, 
particularly due to travel restrictions.

This support has not prevented the sector recording significant write-downs in 
major oil and gas investments, including Woodside Petroleum wiping $6.2 billion 
off its books, followed by Origin Energy announcing it would cop a $1.2 billion 
write down due to bad bets on global gas prices.

Only four per cent of the G20 members had placed conditions on the public 
funding provided to fossil fuel industries that involved targets for reducing 
emissions or other climate change targets.

United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres said that while he welcomed 
the moves from some countries to align their Covid-19 economic stimulus with 
the goals of the Paris Agreement, he sought to other countries to integrate 
climate action into their support packages.

“A growing number of coalitions of investors and real economy stakeholders are 
advocating for a recovery aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement. But 
many have still not got the message,” Guterres said.

“New research on G20 recovery packages released this week shows that twice as 
much recovery money — taxpayers’ money – has been spent on fossil fuels as 
clean energy. Today I would like to urge all leaders to choose the clean energy 
route.”

The Trump Administration has been by far the largest supporter of the fossil 
fuel industry since the Covid-19 outbreak began, channelling almost $US 60 
billion, which includes substantial measures to prop up the country’s airlines.

The amount of financial support does not include unquantifiable measures that 
also support the fossil fuel sector, including the wholesale winding back of 
environmental regulations across the United States.

European countries, particularly Germany and the United Kingdom, have led the 
investment in the clean energy sector, in addition to a massive EU$ 750 billion 
($A 1.25 trillion) European Green Deal.

Think tank The Australia Institute contributed to the analysis, completed as a 
cooperative effort between 14 international organisations, which said that it 
was disappointing that the Morrison government had not seized the opportunities 
presented by Covid-19 to use the clean energy sector to drive economic stimulus.

“Australian governments continue to prop up the coal and natural gas sectors 
with fee waivers, fast-tracked projects and direct investments, further 
entrenching Australia’s position as the third largest exporter of fossil fuels 
in the world,” the Australia Institute’s climate and energy director Richie 
Merzian said.

“It will be disappointing but not surprising if Australia misses the 
opportunity to lever the economic recovery from COVID-19 to address the climate 
crisis that only a few months earlier contributed to unprecedented bush fires 
across the country.”

“Australia is worse than the United States in proportional support for fossil 
fuels over clean energy and should look to the United Kingdom as an example of 
how to prioritise the energy systems of the future, versus entrenching those of 
the past.”

https://reneweconomy.com.au/fossil-fuels-get-four-times-more-covid-stimulus-than-renewables-report-says-44849/

Michael Mazengarb is a journalist with RenewEconomy, based in Sydney. Before 
joining RenewEconomy, Michael worked in the renewable energy sector for more 
than a decade.
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