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Renewable Energy And Jobs-Annual Review 2022

Renewable Energy And Jobs-Annual Review 2022:

The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) released a report titled “Renewable Energy and Jobs-Annual Review 2022”, which says that around 700,000 new jobs were created in the Renewable Energy Sector in just one year.

  • The report identified domestic market size, along with labor, as a major factor influencing job growth in the sector.
  • The Renewable Energy sector employed 12.7 million people across the world in 2021, up from 12 million in 2020.
    Close to two-thirds of all such jobs are in Asia, with China alone accounting for 42 % of the global total.
  • It is followed by the European Union and Brazil with 10 % each and the United States and India with 7 % each.
  • Developed economies received the largest share of investment in the renewable energy field.
  • These countries are on their way to achieving a 60 % growth in the clean energy sector by 2022.
  • Southeast Asian countries are becoming major Solar Photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing hubs and biofuel producers, while China is the pre-eminent manufacturer and installer of solar PV panels and is creating a growing number of jobs in offshore wind.
  • India added more than 10 Gigawatts of solar PV, generating many installation jobs, but remains heavily dependent on imported panels.
  • Europe accounts for about 40 % of the world’s wind manufacturing output and is the most important exporter of wind power equipment; it is trying to reconstitute its solar PV manufacturing industry.
  • In Africa there are growing job opportunities in decentralized renewables, while in the Americas, Mexico is the leading supplier of wind turbine blades.
  • Brazil remains the leading employer in biofuels but is also adding many jobs in wind and solar PV installations.
  • The US is beginning to build a domestic industrial base for the budding offshore wind sector.
  • Solar energy remained the fastest-growing sector.
  • In 2021 it provided 4.3 million jobs — more than a third of the total renewable energy workforce.
  • In 2021, a record 132.8 gigawatts of solar PV capacity were installed globally, up from 125.6 GW in 2020.
  • China accounted for 53 GW (40 %) of this addition. It was followed by the US, India and Brazil, all of which set new annual records.
  • The number of people directly employed in Decentralised Renewable Energy (DRE) in 2021 was more than 80,000 in India (mostly in solar PV), 50,000 each in Kenya and Nigeria, almost 30,000 in Uganda.
  • DRE is a system that uses renewable energy to generate, store and distribute power in a localised way.
  • The share of women in the DRE workforce is still low, particularly for skilled jobs, the researchers observed.
  • Overall, the share of women in DRE was 41 % in Kenya, 37 % in Ethiopia and Nigeria, 28 % in Uganda and 21 % in India.