Hence, it's not a wild guess that — unless something fundamentally changes — the 2014
WEO reference scenario will again show an upward adjustment of the growth in renewables towards 2035.
Not exact matches
The latest IEA
Reference Scenario (that in WEO 2005) shows the same increase in CO2 emissions between 2000 and 2030 — the end - point of the projection — as the IPCC B1 s
Scenario (that in
WEO 2005) shows the same increase in CO2 emissions between 2000 and 2030 — the end - point of the projection — as the IPCC B1
scenarioscenario.
The new baseline should be the IEA 450 (2 °C)
scenario, which as this
WEO shows is not a static
reference point in terms of the pathway to delivering the emissions outcome.
Presenting the New Policies
scenarios — including its unrealistic assumptions on renewable energy — as the
reference scenario inevitably affects policy makers who will base their measures and policy designs on the
WEO.
In each year from 2006, the
reference scenario in the
WEO shows higher cumulative capacity than the year before.
The
WEO 2006 Alternative Policy
scenario shows that CO2 emissions can be reduced by 16 % from the Reference Scenario with policies that more than pay for themselves: 80 % of these reductions come from more efficient production and uses of
scenario shows that CO2 emissions can be reduced by 16 % from the
Reference Scenario with policies that more than pay for themselves: 80 % of these reductions come from more efficient production and uses of
Scenario with policies that more than pay for themselves: 80 % of these reductions come from more efficient production and uses of energy.