By Nadhilah Shani
Khmer Times-May 3

The current global energy landscape differs greatly from what it looked like a decade ago. The world is seen transitioning towards new and renewable energy (RE) in a quiet but fast pace, driven by various factors for the last ten years. This is due to a variety of reasons, including the arising concern over climate change which leads to a global commitment formulated in the Paris Agreement, the uncertainty of oil crisis as seemingly proven by the ‘Hubbert peak oil theory’, and the advancing technologies in RE.
RE is the current rising star globally, reflected by many countries’ moves towards adding the capacity of these technologies. In 2016, two-thirds of additional global power capacity or almost 165 GW were coming from RE. It is also predicted that solar and wind (on-shore and off-shore) will represent 80 percent of global RE capacity in the next five years.
READ MORE AT: https://www.khmertimeskh.com/50485911/renewable-energy-in-asean/
First published in: Khmer Times