Color

#758D99

Hero Carousel

Spotlight

Saudi Aramco IPO – an upside for the climate?

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQDMOSbJtqrtNzif5rS22OQ

Slideshare

http://www.slideshare.net/economistintelligenceunit

Pinterest

https://www.pinterest.com/theeiu/

Climate change and preventing the next global financial crisis

How should businesses respond to the recommendations of the Task Force for Climate-related Financial Disclosures?

An affordable transition to a competitive, low carbon economy is possible

At a time when climate policies are often presented as a drag on economic growth, a recent report from the UK’s Committee on Climate Change shows that moving to a competitive low carbon economy can be done affordably.

Time to turn the circular economy into practice

There is a clear business case for improving the resource efficiency of the economy. Yet, this remains an area of policy that is often overlooked, misunderstood or lacking in substance. It is time for EU institutions and the UK government to give much more impetus to this agenda.

Driving energy efficiency: A comparison of five mature markets

This study looks at the key role the public sector plays in promoting energy efficiency in homes and workplaces in five industrialised countries: the UK, US, Canada, Germany and France. The initiatives fall into three main categories: increasing access to information on energy use and ways to reduce it; offering incentives in the form of grants, loans or tax breaks for upgrades; and supporting or directly providing energy-use labelling and ratings systems for products and for buildings.

The study focuses on the following areas:

Power plants’ flexible future

Outside of China, long-term power plant projects are becoming unviable, but a degree of centralised generation is still essential. Flexible plants are the way forward.

Energy in America: Informing Decisions

Can natural gas can be a bridge fuel to a longer term more renewable heavy generation mix and can it assist the economy? What are the limitations to innovation in the US? 

In this series of talking heads, we get the answers to these questions and many others. 

Energy in America: Five misconceptions

The world's largest economy and the second largest emitter of greenhouse gases, we debunk the myths associated wtih and shaping the US energy debate.  

Curbing US climate change in a new era: The role of innovation and legislation

In September, the US announced it would ratify the Paris Agreement, a global deal signed last December by more than 190 countries that aims to achieve global peaking of greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible to keep temperature increases “well below 2°C” by the end of the century.  This follows the US’ 2015 announced goal to reduce greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions by 28% from 2005 levels by 2025 prior to the Paris climate-change negotiations. 

Creativity to cut carbon: Technological, financial and business model innovation in the United States

In fossil fuels, for instance, natural gas production per rig has increased nearly 9-fold since 2010 in the northeastern US. As for low-carbon technologies, costs for onshore wind power have fallen 40% between 2008 and 2014, while those for solar PV (solar photovoltaic panels) technology were 59% lower in 2014 than they were in 2008. Financial innovations, such as solar leasing, have also helped spur the rollout of distributed solar PV in the US market.  

US energy pricing, policy, security and emissions: next steps

Energy independence has been a stated, albeit ill-defined, goal of the United States since the Nixon administration. Recent developments in both the unconventional oil and gas and renewable energy industries have brought this goal closer than it has been in decades. 

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week