The 5 key takeaways from the Paris climate change agreement

The Paris Climate Change Conference (also known as COP21) is a political milestone in the global fight against climate change. All 195 participating countries agreed to the resulting Paris Agreement. Martin Koehring, senior editor at The Economist Intelligence Unit, examines the key lessons from the negotiations in five categories that matter the most: diplomacy, politics, law, business and economics.

Big money for energy in Africa must be spent on small producers

A recent US$10bn pledge by developed countries to boost renewable-energy expansion in Africa is good news, but the funds must be spent wisely in order to deliver empowerment rather than just power, argues Aaron Leopold, global energy representative at Practical Action, an international development charity.

Agreement at the Paris Climate Summit: an important step forward, let’s build on it

The Climate Change Summit that has just ended in Paris is an important step forward for international climate policy and has provided an agreement that can now be built upon to increase global efforts to tackle climate change. But to be a lasting success, it will need to be rapidly followed by continued international collaboration as well as credible national policies to slash carbon emissions in countries like the UK, argues Nick Molho, executive director of the Aldersgate Group.

To deliver on climate and development we need a new energy approach

The UN climate negotiations being held in Paris between November 30th and December 11th will play a fundamental role in shaping motivations, planning, financing and urgency of energy for the foreseeable future. It is vital that negotiators and key energy decision-makers elsewhere focus on the need to use all the tools at their disposal to bring about an energy revolution that avoids catastrophic climate change and delivers on global development priorities. This means embracing change and becoming friends with the idea that "small is beautiful", argues Aaron Leopold, global energy representative at Practical Action, an international development charity.

The Energy Africa campaign: a light-bulb moment?

Falling prices of solar-power technology and the need to provide electricity to 600m people are opening up major opportunities in Africa, argues Simon Trace, a consultant and writer on technology and development.

Addressing the challenge of energy access for refugees

A new report assesses the state of energy access in refugee camps. Now we must be ambitious in our response and move beyond piecemeal, partial solutions, argues Mary Willcox, Principal Consultant – Energy at Practical Action, an international development charity.

The European Green City Index

The economic impact of energy storage

The ability to store energy effectively has the potential to revolutionise the energy market – and the global economy too

Cutting power consumption

Catching rays

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