Solar officially the cheapest source of new energy in lower-income countries. |
Data from Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) show that the
average price of solar energy in almost 60 countries dropped to US$1.65 million
per megawatt during 2016, just below wind at US$1.66 million per megawatt.
That's based on average prices across 58 emerging markets,
including China, India, and Brazil, and it means renewable energy will be an
increasingly attractive way to go for companies investing in new power plants in
the future.
"Solar investment has gone from nothing ... five years
ago to quite a lot," BNEF analyst Ethan Zindler told Tom Randall at
Bloomberg. "A huge part of this story is China, which has been rapidly
deploying solar."
Read the ScienceAlert
story - “Solar power is now the cheapest form of energy in almost 60 countries.”
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