Yemisi Izuora
The global energy landscape has reached a pivotal turning point where renewable energy now serves as the marginal source of power, according to a report from WMSJ.
In 2024, clean energy technologies met approximately two-thirds of the growth in global demand, driven by a record addition of 741 GW of new capacity.
Projections from the International Energy Agency (IEA) indicate that the pace of these additions through 2030 will roughly double the levels seen between 2019 and 2024.
The report highlights a strong correlation between sustained high oil prices and the acceleration of the energy transition. If Brent crude remains at or above $100 per barrel, it could unlock a $4 trillion cumulative uplift in renewable investment between 2025 and 2030.
This scenario would raise global transition capital expenditures to approximately $20.5 trillion, representing a 25% increase over the current base case. Both energy importers and exporters are expected to respond vigorously to these market conditions. Importers are motivated by energy security and the need to mitigate rising import bills, while exporters seek to diversify their resource rents and protect domestic fiscal health.
China remains a dominant force in this shift, expected to account for 35% to 40% of global capital expenditures through 2030. Meanwhile, the GCC region is projected to see a 13-fold increase in investment as windfall profits from sovereign wealth funds are redirected into new capacity, such as green hydrogen and domestic industrial cooling.
Meanwhile in India, the transition is expected to ramp up six-fold as solar energy increasingly replaces older coal and diesel generation. Even in the US, renewable generation is forecast to quadruple by 2050 as demand for EVs and AI continues to climb.
WMSJ’s report emphasizes that the window for strategic deployment is narrow. Currently, solar modules are at their cheapest point in history at $0.10 per watt. However, the industry faces significant logistical hurdles, including lead times for grid components and transformers that have stretched to between three and five years. Every year of delay allows for the further lock-in of fossil fuel capacity, as evidenced by the 44 GW of coal commissioned in 2024.
The economic argument for front-loading investment is substantial. By accelerating renewable projects now, importer economies could save approximately $1.5 trillion in cumulative oil and gas bills by 2030.
At sustained oil prices of $100 per barrel, these nations face an extra $900 billion per year in energy costs, a burden that each new gigawatt of renewable energy helps to reduce for over 25 years. The report concludes that acting immediately is not only an environmental necessity but a vital strategic hedge against volatile fossil fuel markets.
The heightened volatility in the Middle East, particularly the ongoing disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz, continues to place a significant geopolitical risk premium on global crude prices, among other important commodities. This instability often forces energy-importing nations to accelerate their transition toward renewables to decrease their reliance on vulnerable maritime supply chains.
“The global oil market is increasingly defined by the tension between immediate supply security and the long-term strategic shift toward domestic energy independence,” said Waseem Hoeneini, founder and CEO of WMSJ.

