Author Topic: New research points to bad math behind corporate renewable energy claims  (Read 185 times)

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New research points to bad math behind corporate renewable energy claims
Justine Calma - Yesterday 11:28 AM
 

Even though more companies than ever are proclaiming that they’re powered by renewable energy, those claims are usually exaggerated, new research shows. That disconnect between a company’s claims and reality could jeopardize global efforts to stop climate change.

The problem stems from companies’ reliance on Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) to back up their green claims. A company receives a REC by paying to support renewable energy projects around the world. When brands say that they’re powering their business with 100 percent renewable energy, they’re typically still using electricity generated by fossil fuels; they’re just buying up renewable energy certificates to try to cancel out the environmental impact of their energy use.
 
That disconnect between a company’s claims and reality could jeopardize global efforts to stop climate change
“Too many consumers, media, even investors might actually think that the company is physically using 100 percent renewables. And that is just not the case,” says Anders Bjørn, a postdoctoral fellow at Concordia University and the lead author of a study published today in the journal Nature Climate Change.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/new-research-points-to-bad-math-behind-corporate-renewable-energy-claims/ar-AAYg1t6?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=983780eab8cb4ab5a99e4d01bd44c18e