The Changing Wealth of Nations 2021

Page 435

C H AP TE R 1 4 : Re ne wab le En e r gy: Unaccou nted Wea lth o f Nation s

Such contracts create legacy thermal must-run plants and prevent market penetration and wealth creation from renewable energy, even if they are cheaper to build and operate. Such policy also increases the value of stranded thermal electricity assets should the country decide to accelerate green energy transformation and shifts the burden of paying for stranded assets onto the public sector.

Conclusion This chapter argues that renewable energy represents an increasingly important, yet still unaccounted, wealth of nations. Its value already matches the value of fossil fuel energy in some countries (such as Brazil and Canada) and is likely to grow fast with the global low-carbon transition. Several lessons have been learned from this first experimental effort to develop renewable energy asset values for the CWON. First, and most important, the RVM approach used in the study produced results that cohere with theoretical expectations and that are largely borne out by comparison with the results of other studies. Hydroelectricity assets, as expected based on theory, were found to have mostly positive values, while the values for solar and wind electricity assets were mostly negative, again as expected. Second, the estimated values for renewable energy assets are already large globally and likely to get larger in the greener and more flexible electricity markets of the future. The total estimated value of hydroelectricity assets in 2017 in the 15 countries studied here was about US$1.5 trillion. Although there was no value in these countries’ solar and wind electricity assets in that year, this could have already changed when this volume went to press. These results show that leaving renewable energy assets off the national balance sheets is liable to miss a great deal of wealth in the nottoo-distant future. Third, there are sufficient data available from global and national sources to implement the RVM approach, although data on energy prices and the cost of the produced capital required to generate renewable electricity are not as robust as those on the quantities of electricity generated or the installed generating capacity. Finally, there remain several methodological issues to address before considering inclusion of renewable energy assets in the core CWON natural capital accounts. Going forward, efficient energy and climate policy reforms can quickly turn the value of renewable electricity assets positive. Country-specific simulations with the power sector planning model suggest that by 2040 the value of solar and wind electricity assets in South Africa could reach US$126 billion (in 2018 US$), soon matching the value of coal assets. In Angola, national resources of hydro and solar energy can create more than US$10 billion of wealth with reforms simulated here. This would already be larger than the value of the nation’s natural gas reserves. Costcompetitive wholesale electricity markets with carbon pricing, simulated here, can make clean energy profitable to project developers and can also create wealth to host countries.

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Articles inside

15.2 Social Capital and the COVID-19 Pandemic

5min
pages 463-464

Future Options for Linking Social Capital and Wealth Accounting

2min
page 462

15.1 Social Capital in China

1min
page 461

Why Social Capital Matters for Economic Output and Welfare

6min
pages 455-457

Valuation and Social Capital

2min
page 454

Measurement of Social Capital

9min
pages 448-452

Time Scales for Measuring Social Capital Trends

2min
page 453

Is Social Capital Really Capital?

2min
page 447

Definitions of Social Capital

4min
pages 445-446

Overview of Conceptual Approaches to Social Capital

2min
page 444

Introduction

4min
pages 442-443

Main Messages

1min
page 441

Conclusion

2min
page 435

Notes

5min
pages 436-437

References

3min
pages 438-440

Discussion of Results and Future Research Agenda

5min
pages 433-434

Renewable Energy Resources as Assets in the SNA and SEEA-CF

7min
pages 408-410

Notes

2min
page 401

References

2min
pages 402-406

Conclusion

2min
page 400

13.2 Wealth Data and Sovereign Bonds

2min
page 396

Main Messages

1min
page 387

Wealth on a Country’s Balance Sheet

2min
page 391

References

3min
pages 384-386

Market

5min
pages 374-375

Conclusion

1min
page 376

Notes

5min
pages 382-383

Annex 11A: Country Selection and Benchmarking

5min
pages 348-350

Policies to Mitigate Human Capital Distortions Arising from Nonrenewable Natural Resource Wealth

4min
pages 372-373

References

5min
pages 352-354

Introduction

2min
page 356

Main Messages

1min
page 355

Sustainability and Renewable Natural Capital

5min
pages 323-325

References

7min
pages 310-314

Asset Portfolio Diversification versus Export Diversification

4min
pages 318-319

Notes

2min
page 309

Conclusion

4min
pages 307-308

Political Economy of Global Cooperation on Climate Change

7min
pages 304-306

Comparison with Other Estimates of Stranded Assets

16min
pages 297-303

10.12 Potential Loss of Natural Gas Asset Value, by Region

4min
pages 288-289

10.9 Value of Subsoil Fossil Fuel Assets, by Scenario and Region, 2018–50

1min
page 285

Scenario Analysis to Represent Risk and Uncertainty

3min
pages 279-280

Simulation Results

1min
page 281

Countries and Country Groups

4min
pages 277-278

Main Messages

1min
page 269

Simulation of Subsoil Fuel Asset Values under Uncertainty

2min
page 276

Valuing Subsoil Fossil Fuel Assets in the CWON

2min
page 272

Conclusion

2min
page 263

Main Messages

1min
page 237

Global Distribution of Fossil Fuel and Mineral Wealth

7min
pages 240-243

Introduction

4min
pages 238-239

8.3 More Research Is Needed on the Health Impacts of Air Pollution

2min
page 231

Incorporating the Impact of Air Pollution into the Human Capital Calculations

2min
page 226

8.2 Challenges in Estimating Global Mortality Attributable to Air Pollution

2min
page 225

Gender and Human Capital

8min
pages 200-203

Estimates of Human Capital

13min
pages 193-199

Data and Methodology

4min
pages 191-192

7.1 Different Approaches to Measuring Human Capital

2min
page 189

7.2 The Human Capital Index and the CWON’s Measure of Human Capital

3min
page 190

Main Messages

1min
page 147

Conclusion

2min
page 136

Main Messages

1min
page 187

Main Messages

1min
page 165

Cropland Wealth and Climate Change Scenarios

3min
pages 152-153

Shift in the Global Distribution of Wealth

1min
page 129

Data and Methodology

2min
page 128

References

1min
pages 123-124

Main Messages

1min
page 103

2.1 Savings and Changes in Wealth

2min
page 97

Annex 1A: Treatment of Carbon Accounting in the SEEA Ecosystem Accounts

5min
pages 83-85

How Wealth Changes over Time

4min
pages 91-92

Summing Up and Future Research

7min
pages 80-82

Roadmap for the Report

9min
pages 76-79

Role of Policies and Institutions in Creating Value for Natural Capital

2min
page 75

ES.2 What’s New in CWON 2021?

2min
page 61

From Monitoring Economic Performance to Managing the Economy

4min
pages 73-74

Wealth Accounts as a Tool for Macroeconomic Policy and the Financial Sector

3min
pages 59-60

Looking Ahead

4min
pages 62-63

ES.1 Strengths and Limitations of Wealth Accounting

2min
page 46

Sustainability, Resilience, and Inclusiveness Are Urgent Challenges for Economic Development

1min
page 45

What Is Included in Comprehensive Wealth Accounts?

2min
page 72

1.1 Sustainability and the Wealth of Nations

2min
page 71
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