EU climate and energy policy is âreasonably effectiveâ, but it could achieve more for the climate if it focused purely on reducing CO2-emissions, says David Hone, Chief Climate Change Advisor at Shell, in an interview with Energy Post. âThere are too many goals and too many targets.â Hone also argues that first generation biofuels are needed to make advanced biofuels work and that a ânew approachâ towards CCS is urgently needed. Globally, Hone … [Read more...]
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Remi Eriksen, CEO DNV GL: Gas and renewables can be best of ‘frenemies’
Gas could be the ideal partner for renewable energy generation in a future sustainable energy mix, writes Remi Eriksen, Group President and CEO of DNV GL, one of the largest risk management providers in the world with operations in more than 100 countries. However, for this to happen, the oil and gas industry must help policymakers and the public become aware of all the benefits of gas, notes Eriksen, not just the economic ones. Also, the … [Read more...]
New Energy Challenge calls on European energy startups to submit game-changing ideas
Shell Technology Ventures, Rockstart and YES!Delft today have launched the second edition of the New Energy Challenge, a competition for European start-ups offering innovative, low-carbon energy solutions. The competition aims to accelerate the development and implementation of breakthrough technologies. The winning start-up will receive a âŹ100,000 convertible loan from Shell. … [Read more...]
The woman who is building a nuclear power plant
Minna Forsström is responsible for a unique project: the first Russian-made nuclear power plant to be built in the E.U. outside of the former Soviet Union. In a personal interview with Energy Post, she reveals how her company, Fennovoima, has coped with extremely demanding regulatory challenges (âyou canât expect to submit a project and have it approved all in one goâ), why they chose to work with Rosatom (âthey have huge engineering capacity and … [Read more...]
A revolution: The Netherlands kisses gas goodbye â but will it help the climate?
Revolution in gas country the Netherlands: the Dutch government wants all residential buildings to be off gas in 2050. The objective is to reduce CO2 emissions from the built environment. But does phasing out gas deliver the expected results? Eline van den Ende spoke to experts and concludes that a âgas-lessâ society makes sense only if additional measures are taken. … [Read more...]
Some irony: Trumpâs Paris exit will hurt nuclear and coal power
Ironically, Donald Trumpâs withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement will hurt two sectors that his administration would like to protect: the nuclear and the coal power industry, writes Washington DC-based energy author Dennis Wamsted. This is because without a Federal climate policy, neither nuclear power nor carbon capture and storage (CCS) will get the support they need. … [Read more...]
UK Election 2017: What the manifestos say on energy and climate change
On 8 June, the UK will head to the polls for the third time in as many years. In an election dominated by Brexit, Carbon Brief tracks the climate change and energy content of partiesâ manifestos, as they are launched. Courtesy Carbon Brief. … [Read more...]
Donald Trump shows us how disturbed our world has become
We owe Donald Trump a small bow of thanks and a genuine debt of gratitude, writes Tom Engelhardt, editor of Tomdispatch.com. According to Engelhardt, Trump is teaching us just "how deeply disturbed our American world actually is". A withering analysis of a leader "without fixed boundaries, definitions, or history, which is why nothing he says has real meaning. And yet he couldnât be more meaningful.â Courtesy Tomdispatch.com. … [Read more...]
Forbidden questions: 24 key issues that neither the Washington elite nor the media consider worth their botherÂ
The truth may now âbe more important than everâ, as the New York Times proclaims, but finding it requires looking in the right places and raising fundamental issues, writes historian and author Andrew J. Bacevich. According to Bacevich, the foreign policy debate in the U.S. consistenly avoids the questions that really matter. Courtesy TomDispatch.com. … [Read more...]
The US quitting the Paris climate deal will only make things worse
Some argue that the U.S. leaving Paris would be beneficial to global climate policy, others believe it would be harmful. In this article, Jonathan Pickering of the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance at the University of Canberra argues that the US quitting Paris will make matters worse. In another article, Luke Kemp, Lecturer in International Relations and Environmental Policy at Australian National University, takes the … [Read more...]
The world would be better off if Trump withdraws from the Paris climate deal
Some argue that the U.S. leaving Paris would be beneficial to global climate policy, others believe it would be harmful. In this article, Luke Kemp, Lecturer in International Relations and Environmental Policy at Australian National University, argues the world would be better off if Trump withdraws from Paris. In another article, Jonathan Pickering of the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance at the University of Canberra takes … [Read more...]
A new energy bible: Samuele Furfari explains why technology is king
If youâre in the energy business, here is a new manual for you that lays out the essentials of what energy is and how it shapes geopolitics today. Professor and long-time European Commission official Samuele Furfari has condensed his 39 years of experience in the energy sector into a two-volume tome of more than 1,250 pages that goes right from the fundamentals of physics through Britainâs rule of the Middle East to modern day realities such as … [Read more...]
Biopower (part 3): what does the future hold?
The future of bioenergy is uncertain. The many constraints it faces suggest it could see very little growth. But the huge challenge of solving climate change makes some think it could be the savior of the planet in the long run. This is part 3 of a three-part series that first appeared on the Energy Transition blog, at energytransition.org. … [Read more...]
Biopower (part 2): Climate science for bioenergy is lost in the woods
Producing electricity from biomass is one of the most controversial and least understood forms of renewable energy. In this three part series, we first explored myths and facts about biopower. In this second installment weâll try to make sense of a seemingly simple question â is biopower good for cutting our carbon emissions? It is anything but simple. This series first appeared on the Energy Transition blog, at energytransition.org. … [Read more...]
Myths and facts about biopower (part 1 of 3)
While wind and solar are widely popular, and nuclear and energy storage hotly debated, much less is said about the role bioenergy could play in the transition to a low-carbon society. In a three-part article, Bentham Paulos argues that bioenergy has an important role to play in the green future and exposes some of the myths around it. This article originally appeared in the Energy Transition blog. … [Read more...]
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