Clean energy investment around the world is rebounding after a three-year decline, according to new figures released Friday by Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Globally, the total amount of clean energy investment jumped 16 percent in 2014, to $310 billion. That number is just shy of the record amount of investment set in 2011.
BNEF produces quarterly reports that track how much money governments and the private sector are pouring into wind, solar, biofuels, and other green energy projects. In 2014, the United States enjoyed its biggest investments since 2012, but it was China that once again drove the numbers. China’s clean energy spending shot up 32 percent to a record $89.5 billion, cementing its place as the world’s top market for green investment. (You can get a sense of just how impressive Chinese investment is by peaking inside the world’s biggest solar manufacturing factory, which is run by Chinese company Yingli.)
Solar is getting the lion’s share of investment around the world, according to the figures. Almost half the money spent on clean energy this year — just shy of $150 billion — was in the solar industry. Wind investment also reached record levels — $19.4 billion globally — thanks in part to offshore projects in Europe.
There was one darker patch in the numbers: Australia, where the government is trying to slash the country’s Renewable Energy Target, a policy that creates mandates for the amount of clean energy in the electricity mix. Bucking the global trend, investments there fell by 35 percent.
This story was produced as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.