Timeline: What’s included in the IEA’s new Net-Zero Roadmap for energy?

Published on Tuesday (26 September), the Agency’s new Roadmap report is an update on a key tool first produced in 2021 in the run-up to COP26 in Glasgow. It is intended to help policymakers, regulators and other key bodies make science-based decisions to deliver a just energy transition aligned with the Paris Agreement.

The roadmap concludes that it is still possible to transition the global energy system to net-zero by 2050 on a 1.5C pathway – and, indeed, that it would cost just a fraction of the trillions currently poured into the system each year.

The scenario it explores would save $12trn, cumulatively, in terms of energy system operating costs, by 2050. It would also ensure universal access to modern forms of energy by 2030.

Promisingly, the technologies needed to deliver almost two-thirds of the emissions reductions needed through to 2050 exist today.

IEA executive director Fatih Birol has stated that the main remaining challenges to delivering the scenario outlined are political will and international collaboration for unprecedented investment in clean energy, energy infrastructure and improved efficiencies.

Here, we outline the key investment and policy milestones detailed in the new roadmap.

You can read edie’s initial news coverage of the roadmap launch here. 

In the early 2020s…

In the mid-2020s…

By 2030…

In 2035…

In 2040…

By 2045…

By 2050…

… and beyond