It is possible that Putin is simply unaware of global energy industry tendencies – if so, he is glaringly incompetent. All told, investments into renewable energy across the Group of Twenty countries – the world’s 20 most advanced and emerging economies – reach tens of billions of dollars, while installed power-generating capacities running on renewable sources approach tens of gigawatts. In Russia, both of these values hover around zero.
Putin’s remarks on renewable energy came during the VII annual Valdai Discussion Club – a global forum for, mostly, foreign experts on Russia, invited for a sustained dialogue about the country’s political, economic, social, and cultural development – which took place this year in Sochi last month.
The following are excerpts from Putin’s speech as taken from verbatim records available on the premier’s website:
“…You must also know that global energy experts predict a steady growth in consumption. However, the structure of consumption will remain practically unchanged. There may be a very insignificant change despite all the efforts to develop alternative fuels. You can't convert large power plants to wind generators, although the idea is certainly tempting. You won't be able to do that for several decades because it's impossible. Impossible!
“… the German government has decided against closing nuclear power plants. Why? Because there is no alternative, that's why, because nuclear power generation is the only available alternative to oil and gas today. These projects exist. They are viable alternatives. All other ideas are just for fun now…”
Something to trifle with, indeed. The Valdai Discussion Club participants are mostly foreign journalists, observers, and experts in political science. They know very well that in many countries, wind power installations produce up to five to 10 percent of the total energy generated, while the share of nuclear energy is diminishing globally. This is probably why Putin was being so emotional: It’s one thing to preach to one’s own choir – like the ever-subservient regional governors. But showing one’s prejudices – or indeed, incompetence – to an international audience, that is a different thing altogether.
To be sure, this is not the first time the Russian premier has shown a clear bias toward nuclear power. Last April, on the eve of an anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, Putin paid a visit to Kalinin Nuclear Power Plant, where he pledged support to the nuclear energy industry and pressed for more nuclear reactors.
As the share of nuclear energy in total power generation was only 16 percent in Russia, compared to over “25 percent to 30 percent in many European countries,” Putin said, “in this respect, we even need to start catching up with developed industrial countries.”
But why has Premier Putin been taking all this so close to heart? At the Valdai meeting, it sounded like, a couple of minutes more into the discussion and he would be ready to have renewable energy proponents “wiped out in the outhouse” – as he once famously said about Chechen rebels. The thing is, either the premier has no access to information about the true potential of renewable energy, or he does have all the right facts, but is rather willing to present the reality in such light as if to demonstrate that clean energy sources were no real alternative to either hydrocarbons or the nuclear energy – just some trifling business, to engage in “for fun.”
So what about facts? By 2009, the world’s installed capacities for power generation from renewable energy sources reached 250 gigawatts, or about 6 percent of all power generated across the globe.
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| A wind farm stretching along a highway in the Netherlands. For Russia, such a landscape so far remains a distant dream. |
| Source: Windlife Energy |
Facts also say renewable energy is a powerful, highly competitive, and fast-growing sector of economy – a multibillion-dollar industry that would unlikely be so today if it were just “for fun,” as Putin put it. It is further proof of the premier’s incompetence that Russia has almost no projects in development that would envision the promotion of clean energy sources of any kind.
In Murmansk Region, in Russia’s far northern Kola Peninsula – a territory that experts say offers most propitious conditions for the development of wind energy – two wind park projects, with hundreds of megawatts of as-yet untapped potential, have been spinning their wheels owing to a lack of due financial and political support on the part of local authorities. One of these projects, developed by Windlife Energy and Windlife Arctic Power, has already been approved and, should the necessary government support materialise, would see a number of wind farms built along the road connecting the regional centre of Murmansk with the Serebryanskaya Hydropower Plants I and II.
According to the Kola Scientific Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the available wind potential of the Kola Peninsula is around 350 billion kilowatt-hours per year. This is twenty times as much as the entire electricity demand of Murmansk Region, which is currently around 17 billion kilowatt-hours.
In March 2010, PEW Trust published a report entitled “Who’s Winning the Clean Energy Race? Growth, Competition, and Opportunity in the World’s Largest Economies.” View the report in the PDF file downloadable to the right: