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Energy efficiency and energy savings

 Report Summary

Key findings of the report, Energy efficiency and energy savings: a view from the building sector, include:                                                         

India’s uncertain energy future

In July this year a catastrophic failure of the power grid in India left 600m people without electricity. The incident seemed to mock the country’s ambitions to become a global superpower.

John Hills on The Green Deal

In this Big Ideas Project for the Energy community, John Hills, Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics talks about the importance of not cutting corners when The Green Deal is concerned.

Developing carbon capture and storage

There are truths that cannot be denied. First, nature will determine how serious a problem climate change is, not our politicians.

Empowering growth

Despite India’s roaring economic growth over the past decade, and its citizens’ growing belief that it is finally ready to join the league of global superpowers, the country remains vulnerable to occasional dysfunction. Nothing typifies this better than the blackout in July 2012 that left some 600m people without electricity. Reforms that began in 1991 have gone some way towards improving the efficiency of India’s energy sector, but serious impediments to investment remain. As a result, India’s energy supply is constantly playing catch-up to the demands of its burgeoning economy.

The outlook for nuclear

The March 2011 earthquake and tsunami which disabled the Fukushima-Daichi nuclear power plant in Japan sent shockwaves around the world about the viability and safety of nuclear power.

Pragmatic solar

It is almost certainly the case that humanity has entered a third, historic energy transition. The first two, from wood to coal in the 18th century and then coal to oil in the 20th century, in retrospect seem obvious in their outcomes.

Kinetics and boutique luxury energy

Powering devices by energy derived from movement is increasingly common. For years kinetic energy has powered wristwatch mechanisms.

Why Europe needs an energy roadmap to 2050

Energy systems are like trees. You don't notice the changes from day to day, but over ten or twenty years, the changes can be amazing.

Regulating investment in low-carbon energy

The UK government’s present policy position finds itself firmly skewered on the horns of a dilemma that the recent contributions by David Kennedy and Guy Newey illustrate all too vividly. That is, how to balance the delivery of low carbon energy with the need to keep the bill for customers (or taxpayers) as low as possible.

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