Arctic Summit 2014 - The growing importance of the Arctic region

A presentation from Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson, Minister for Foreign Affairs and External Trade, Iceland

Closing address at The UK Energy Summit 2010

This video is one of the selected highlights from some of the experts on the subject of energy and the environment, as part of The Big Ideas Project. George Monbiot, Author and journalist, shared his thoughs on "the big CO2 emissions lie".

Roger Harrabin: Chair's introduction

In this video, Roger Harrabin, Energy and Environment Analyst at BBC, provides his closing remarks as Chair of The UK Energy Summit 2012.

Turning the tide on sulfur emissions

Today there are more than 100,000 cargo ships on the sea, transporting the solids, liquids and gases that we all need to live. The rapid growth of middle class consumers in India and China is only likely to push this number up even further.

Optimising energy consumption

The Economist Intelligence Unit spoke to Didier Teirlinck, executive vice-president for the climate segment at Ingersoll Rand, an Irish manufacturing group, to get a comprehensive view of trends in energy optimisation for large-scale consumers.

Risky business

Does climate-change policy pose a risk for the world's oil, gas and coal industries? asks Peter Kiernan, lead energy analyst at The Economist Intelligence Unit.

Japan’s energy revolution

As Japan opens up the residential energy market to competition in 2016, can utilities companies inject the innovation needed to encourage more energy efficient behaviour?

Shale oil dynamics

Since 2008 the production of shale oil (oil held in shales and other rock formations from which it will not naturally flow freely) in America has surged from 600,000 to 3.5m barrels per day, as reported by the Energy Information Administration. How is the take-up of shale oil sources in the US affecting the global energy market? We asked Joan MacNaughton, executive chair of the World Energy Trilemma for the World Energy Council.

Making heat affordable

Fuel-poor households deserve a better and healthier future, argues Derek Lickorish, chairman of the Fuel Poverty Advisory Group for England (FPAG).

Making the built environment a trump card for the world’s economies

In 2010, the residential and non-residential building sectors accounted for 8% of the global GDP (USD 4.9 trillion). China was by far the largest market for new buildings because of the increased migration from rural to urban areas.

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