On 26 November the EU's Energy Ministers will decide on a new climate and energy governance mechanism. This will be crucial to delivering the outcomes that these leaders agreed on last year in climate and energy policy. However, the draft of the Energy Council’s Conclusions, already published on 30 September, is a cause for concern, writes Oliver Sartor of the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI). Sartor … [Read more...]
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Renewables: does the IEA underestimate them?
In a new market report on renewable energy, the International Energy Agency (IEA) notes that renewables will represent “the largest single source of electricity growth over the next five years”, reaching a share of 26% of world power supply in 2020, compared to 22% in 2013. Yet critics say the IEA is still underestimating the speed at which renewables like solar and wind are likely to grow. Energy Post editor Karel Beckman tries to figure out … [Read more...]
Disaffected members of UNECE Gas Centre launch new Global Gas Centre under wings of World Energy Council
The World Energy Council is launching a new Global Gas Centre in St. Petersburg on 6 October in collaboration with gas companies ENGIE, OMV and Swissgas. These companies have all recently left another gas organisation, the Gas Centre of the UNECE (United Nations Economic Commission for Europe), out of dissatisfaction. In St Petersburg, the Global Gas Centre wants to sign up new members, particularly Gazprom, the current Chair of the UNECE’s Gas … [Read more...]
Exit Ahead – Shell at the end of the Oil Superhighway
Shell’s departure from the Arctic is a very significant event in the global energy picture, writes Energy Post editor-in-chief Karel Beckman. It is another sign that the End of the Oil Age is in sight. … [Read more...]
China announces national emission trading scheme – experts react
China will launch a national emission trading scheme. In a joint US-China climate statement, issued as part of President Xi Jinping’s state visit to the United States, China said its new trading sytem will cover “key industry sectors such as iron and steel, power generation, chemicals, building materials, paper-making, and nonferrous metals”. On The Conversation, four experts react to this news. "How interesting that China the communist country … [Read more...]
“Mercedes, BMW and Peugeot models consume 50% more fuel than official results”
New cars, including the Mercedes A, C and E class, BMW 5 series and Peugeot 308, are now swallowing around 50% more fuel than their lab test results reveal, according to new on-the-road results compiled by NGO Transport & Environment (T&E). T&E calls for a comprehensive investigation into both air pollution and fuel economy tests across Europe and a complete overhaul of the testing system. … [Read more...]
China and US: new climate commitments, common vision
US President Obama and Chinese President Xi announced far-reaching new climate policy proposals on 25 September during Xi's state visit in Washington DC. Ahead of the UN Climate Summit (COP21) in Paris in December, they came out with several new pledges in areas such as climate finance and energy efficiency standards. Moreover, China announced the launch of a national emission trading system in 2017 and the implementation of a new green dispatch … [Read more...]
US desperately needs a national energy policy
The US - and indeed the world - is at a crossroads when it comes to the choice on how we want to provide energy services in the future, writes US energy expert Allan Hoffman. According to Hoffman, the US desperately needs a national energy policy that recognizes the importance of moving to a renewable energy future as quickly as possible. Without such a policy, economic growth, the environment and national security will suffer. … [Read more...]
Paris, give us carbon pricing, but give us market mechanisms too!
The world’s leading energy companies and investors, represented by the World Energy Council, have made it crystal clear they consider carbon pricing essential to generate sufficient investment for a low-carbon future, writes Joan MacNaughton, Chair of the World Energy Trilemma project of the World Energy Council. But according to MacNaughton, it is vital that policymakers in Paris don’t just put a price on carbon, but also allow for market … [Read more...]
Paris climate summit: EU chooses transformation over decarbonisation
European environment ministers have agreed a negotiating mandate for the EU for the UN climate conference in Paris in December (COP21). Under the influence of Poland and other Eastern European countries, they couched the EU’s ambitions in terms of “transformation” and “climate neutrality”, rather than decarbonisation, leaving room for coal and gas use with carbon capture and storage. The EU is also shifting from a “narrow focus on accounting” of … [Read more...]
“I fear we will see radicalisation” if Paris flops, says Connie Hedegaard, chair of 2009 Copenhagen summit
If 'Paris' flops, “there will still be lots of climate summits, but ministers will stop coming, the top people will not attend, the air will go out of it”, said Connie Hedegaard, former EU Climate Commissioner who led the word’s  last crucial climate talks in Copenhagen in 2009, at a meeting of the Sydney Democracy Network. She warned that “Paris will probably deliver, but if it doesn’t, I fear we will see a radicalisation”. Professor Nick Rowley … [Read more...]
How companies can determine their fair climate share
If energy-intensive industries were to get together and make joint climate pledges, how could they determine what would be a fair and significant contribution for each company? There are new tools available for this, including so-called Science Based Targets used by organisations like WWF, the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) and the World Resources Institute (WRI), writes Rolf de Vos in a new post on the Ecofys Paris Climate blog hosted by Energy … [Read more...]
Four reasons Jeremy Corbyn’s innovative energy policy is no 80s throwback
What would be the energy policy of a UK Labour government under Jeremy Corbyn, its newly elected leader? Citing Corbyn’s recently published manifesto, Protecting Our Planet, Stephen Hall, Research Fellow at the University of Leeds, argues that it would be anything but a throwback to the past. On the contrary, it meets the issues of today in innovative and practical ways. … [Read more...]
Natural gas methane problem? It’s overstated
The role of natural gas as a “bridge fuel” has been called into question by critics who argue that methane leakage rates from gas production and transport could outweigh the lower CO2 emissions associated with gas. However, according to Alex Trembath, policy associate at the Breakthrough Institute, this is not what most of the scientific literature says. “Methane leakage is a minor factor in determining the benefit of gas versus coal and methane … [Read more...]
The Urgenda judgment: a “victory” for the climate that is likely to backfire
The Dutch government has decided to appeal the widely publicised “Urgenda” ruling from the district court in The Hague, ordering the Netherlands to step up its climate change actions. According to Lucas Bergkamp, Partner at Hunton & Williams and Emeritus Professor of International Environmental Liability Law at Erasmus University Rotterdam, there are good reasons why we should hope that the court of appeals will overturn the ruling. According … [Read more...]
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