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/

Global Energy Conversation II

This report, edited by the Economist Intelligence Unit and supported by Shell, follows an event held in November 2011 that brought together energy experts based in London, Sao Paulo and Washington DC for a live global conversation on the future of energy.

We have invited the same group of experts that participated in the debate to give us their views on how the world can meet rapidly rising demand for energy while also reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The report also highlights some of the best contributions made in the online debate that surrounded their conversation.

Big spenders

Report Summary

Big Spenders: the outlook for the oil and gas industry in 2012 is an Economist Intelligence Unit report which analyses the oil and gas industry outlook from the point of view of top-level operators, including CEOs and other board-level executives and policymakers. The report has been commissioned by GL Noble Denton.

Managing the risk in renewable energy

In 2010 global investment in new renewable energy projects exceeded investment in new fossil fuelfired plants for the first time, largely driven by a mix of renewable energy incentives and political pressure to invest in less emission-intensive energy production. Yet although investments in renewable energy plants are growing, so are the risks. Political/regulatory risk and financial risk are on the rise against a backdrop of macro-economic uncertainty, while weather-related volume risk is rising up the agenda as investments in offshore wind farms accelerate.

Energy Realities

The website, at , combines videos, articles and maps from the Economist Intelligence Unit and partners National Geographic and New Scientist. Together, they tell the story of energy use, production and sustainability on our planet. We invite you to explore and share this content to help increase understanding and dialogue about our world's energy needs.

The Global Energy Conversation

This report, edited by the Economist Intelligence Unit and supported by Shell, follows an event held in June 2011 that brought together energy experts based in London, Singapore and Shanghai for the world’s first live global conversation on the future of energy.

We have invited the same group of experts that participated in the debate to explain their views on the most challenging questions that arose during their discussion. The report also highlights some of the best contributions made in the online debate that surrounded their conversation.

US and Canada green city index

Report Summary

The US and Canada Green City Index, a research project conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by Siemens, seeks to measure and assess the environmental performance of 27 major US and Canadian cities across a range of criteria. This report presents the key findings and highlights from the Index, and is intended to provide stakeholders with a unique tool to help cities in the region learn from each other in order to better address the common environmental challenges they face.

Economies of scale

Key Findings

  • The greatest benefits of replication are achieved when project teams approach their first project with duplication in mind. Through the standardisation of components and project management methodologies, oil and gas firms can reduce costs on their projects by 15-30% and time to completion by 15-40% once a firm’s process is optimised.

Chasing the negawatt

Report Summary

Chasing the negawatt – Energy efficiency in British homes and business: A policy perspective is a T-Systems report, written by the Economist Intelligence Unit. It reviews current UK business and consumer perspectives on energy efficiencyin order to identify the steps that need to be taken to change their behaviour.

The frugal manufacturer

Report Summary

Industry accounts for around one-third of the world’s final energy demand; around 60 percent of this industrial demand is from developing countries. Industry’s total energy use continues to grow as a result of expanding production volumes, a trend that is likely to continue in the coming decades as living standards rise in developing regions. Meanwhile, energy use by industry is in many parts of the world less than fully efficient, and in some parts of industry leaves much room for improvement.

Adapting to an uncertain climate

Report Summary

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