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Designing the Covid-19 stimulus: what the 2008 crisis can teach us

April 23, 2020 by Fatih Birol

Policy makers around the world are hearing a lot of advice on how to design their stimulus packages. This comes from the IEA where Fatih Birol lays out five fundamental lessons we can learn from the stimulus packages that came out of the 2008 global financial crisis. His main headings are: Build on what you already have – and think big (e.g. feed-in tariffs, production tax credits); Choose technologies that are ready for the big time (e.g. wind, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Investment, Policies Tagged With: batteries, buildings, China, Coronavirus, efficiency, Europe, hydrogen, investment, Offshore Wind, policies, solar, stimulus, US, wind

Europe needs its own EV battery recycling industry

March 25, 2020 by Raphaël Danino-Perraud

Europe needs its own battery recycling industry, and the EU’s European Battery Alliance should make it happen, says RaphaĂ«l Danino-Perraud writing for the IFRI Centre for Energy & Climate. For economic, strategic and environmental reasons, today’s overwhelming dependence on outsourcing – in this case to Asia - for battery manufacture and recycling needs to change. To start with, Asia provides over 90% of global car battery output, half coming … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Storage, Transport and energy Tagged With: Asia, batteries, China, EU, Europe, EVs, policies, recycling, storage, transport, Umicore

Grid Battery tech on track. It now needs re-designed markets, monetisation

March 23, 2020 by Emanuele Taibi, Carlos Fernandez and Aakarshan Vaid

The rapid expansion of variable renewable electricity generation is making cost effective storage more urgent. Sure enough, in Europe several electricity storage projects are under construction and new ones are announced almost on a weekly basis. The battery technology seems to be on track, with estimates of $156/kWh in 2019 dropping to $61/kWh by 2030. But progress is hampered by the lack of a market that recognises and rewards the true value of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Storage Tagged With: australia, batteries, electricity, Europe, grids, LowCarbon, markets, NationalGrid, NEC, policies, storage, Tesla, Total, UK

Carbon Tax: “laboratory” Europe shows U.S. it has no effect on aggregate jobs, growth

January 31, 2020 by Meredith Fowlie

The issue of carbon taxes is under debate in the U.S. Congress. The fear is a new tax will destroy jobs and hinder growth. Will it? Meredith Fowlie at the Energy Institute at Haas says the U.S. should see Europe as a very useful carbon tax laboratory experiment: half the countries have some sort of tax, the other half don’t. She’s pulled together evidence to answer the simple question: does a carbon tax affect aggregate employment and growth. Her … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal, Policies Tagged With: Canada, carbontax, coal, Europe, gas, GDP, growth, jobs, oil, policies, US

The Six Energy Paradoxes that slow the sector’s progress

January 21, 2020 by Gerard Reid

Gerard Reid at Alexa Capital takes a high level look at what he sees as six systemic problems faced throughout the energy sector. They can be found at every level, across all technologies and markets. He calls them the Six Energy Paradoxes. All of them are acting as a serious drag on progress, Transition or not. Take the Market Efficiency Paradox. Utilities should adjust their prices to meet changes in energy supply and demand. Higher supply or … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Policies Tagged With: electricity, Europe, gas, Government, policies, pricing, renewables, US, utilities

Offshore Wind: a new source of clean energy for Asia?

October 30, 2019 by IEEFA

Offshore wind is seeing the same dramatic cost reductions as solar and onshore wind. Though still more expensive, it’s heading towards $60/MWh parity with them across Europe. The U.S., China and Taiwan are also experiencing impressive drops. It’s why global capacity nearly doubled in three years from 12GW in December 2015 to 23GW by the end of 2018. IEEFA’s briefing note “Offshore Wind Ready to Be Key Part of Energy Mix Globally – Top European … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Renewables Tagged With: China, Europe, investment, OffshoreWind, renewables, solar, Taiwan, US, wind

Non-energy firms lead investments in clean energy start-ups

October 16, 2019 by Simon Bennett

Investments in innovative “blue sky” companies tell us where the bets are being placed on the energy sector’s future. Such investments leaped in 2016, mostly directed at clean energy technology. This analysis by Simon Bennett at the IEA usefully includes a long list of firms and their investments. Digital sensors, batteries, electric vehicles and smart algorithms are among the main recipients this year. Other fascinating categories include … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Investment Tagged With: China, clean_energy, Europe, EVs, ICT, investment, storage, Technology, transport

Women facing barriers in the renewables workforce

October 10, 2019 by Katy Briggs

Gender discrimination always matters. It should matter even more to the new green economy. Justice aside, barriers against half the workforce limit your talent pool. For a sector where "business as usual" guarantees failure we need to ensure the fairest selection processes from the widest possible pool as new jobs are created every day. But today’s energy sector has a bigger role to play. Energy is now arguably the 21st century’s “sector of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Policies, Renewables Tagged With: Europe, gender, jobs, Just_Transition, renewables, solar, US, wind

China’s quest for gas security is reshaping the global LNG market

September 19, 2019 by Sylvie Cornot-Gandolphe

In just two years, China has become the world’s top gas importer and should soon become the largest importer of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG). But that growing import dependency, domestic winter supply concerns, and the trade war with the U.S. means the Chinese government is reinforcing its gas supply policy, says a report "China’s Quest for Gas Supply Security: The Global Implications" by the IFRI Centre for Energy & Climate, authored by … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal Tagged With: China, Europe, gas, LNG, markets, oilandgas, policy, Russia, US

Wind power predictions doubled by factoring in far-future design improvements

July 18, 2019 by Josh Gabbatiss

Existing studies estimate all Europe’s potential total maximum annual generation from wind is between 16 and 21 petawatt hours (PWh), already over five times Europe’s existing electricity total from all sources (3.6PWh). A new study doubles that figure to 34.3PWh. The study claims to improve on the accuracy of two factors used in making these predictions, explains Josh Gabbatiss at Carbon Brief. Firstly, it uses what it believes are realistic … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Renewables Tagged With: electricity, Europe, innovation, onshore wind, renewables, Vestas, wind

50% Hydrogen for Europe: a manifesto

May 7, 2019 by Frank Wouters and Ad van Wijk

Electricity has well known limitations, mainly for bulk and long-range transport, industrial processes requiring high temperature heat, and the chemicals industry. To entirely replace fossil fuels we need hydrogen, say Frank Wouters and Prof. Dr. Ad van Wijk. It has an energy density comparable to hydrocarbons. There's more: Europe’s electric grid can’t cope with 100% electrification, yet hydrogen would use the existing gas pipe networks. The … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Energy, Hydrogen, Renewables Tagged With: electricity, emissions, Europe, gas, grids, hydrogen, networks

Children today must emit eight times less CO2 than their grandparents

April 17, 2019 by Zeke Hausfather

No wonder young people have taken the reins of the climate demonstrations away from the adults. Zeke Hausfather at Carbon Brief shows that the global budget for avoiding warming of 1.5C or 2C has already been mostly used up. To put that in numbers, if children emit like their parents they’ll exhaust their carbon budget in just 9 years. It’s why emissions must peak in the next few years and then rapidly decline to hit the Paris targets. That’s … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Climate policy, Energy Tagged With: China, emissions, Europe, ghg, India, Paris2050, US

Fieldfisher Interconnectors Forum – Brussels, 21 March 2019

March 21, 2019 by Fieldfisher Leave a Comment

The Fieldfisher Interconnector Forum will take a highly topical look at Interconnectors across Europe and the UK. This free half day event will cover significant legal developments and hot topics, including: The Outlook for Interconnectors - Future Opportunities Brexit and Future Energy Trading Scenarios Energy Market and Regulation Updates Environmental and Planning Perspectives Attendees will hear from Will Bridges, … [Read more...]

Tagged With: 2019, 2050 climate strategy, Brussels, business models, carbon tax, circulareconomy; innovation; energy, distributed generation, electricity, Energy, energy law, EU energy policy, Europe, feed-in tariffs, import dependency. EU energy policy, renewable energy, security of supply, Transmission, utilities

Report maps out the new geopolitical power dynamics created by renewables

January 15, 2019 by IRENA

A new report by the Global Commission on the Geopolitics of Energy Transformation says the new energy age will profoundly reshape relations between states and regions. It will bring “A New World” of power, security, energy independence and prosperity. It will also reshape the geopolitical map, just as fossil-fuels have done over the last 200 years. No nation will be unaffected. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Climate policy, Energy, Oil, Gas & Coal, Renewables Tagged With: Africa, Americas, Asia, Energy, Europe, fossil-fuels, geopolitics, ghg, IRENA, minerals, renewable, solar, transition, wind

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        Recent Posts

        How will China respond to the EU’s “40% made at home” clean energy tech ambition

        Steel, Aluminium: 20% of emissions reductions target must come from Recycling. How?

        “Flow Batteries” for grid-scale storage: modelling cheaper alternatives to Vanadium

        IEA report: global manufacturing capacity is expanding rapidly for solar, wind, batteries, electrolysers, heat pumps

        Community Batteries: when they’re the best option for overcoming grid constraints. And when they’re not

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