The paper applies a Levelized Cost of Electricity (LCOE)[1] sensitivity analysis across three scenarios: the 2016 reference case scenario, an updated 2016 scenario and a 2020 2 ˚C pathway setting, where investment decisions take into account
decarbonisation trends.
Not exact matches
Minister for the Environment and Water Resources, Masagos Zulkifli, said that it makes business sense for companies to start pricing the cost of emissions into operations given the growing
trend towards
decarbonisation of the economy.
In order to keep within a «safe» temperature threshold, deep and rapid
decarbonisation is required, and yet existing
trends show that global emissions are still growing rapidly.
The electricity sector is undergoing change at an unprecedented pace with the growth in distributed generation enhancing
trends in decentralisation and
decarbonisation, opening new opportunities and challenges for countries to balance the energy trilemma.
Well, if you take a step back, it's relatively easy to identify three
trends driving the ongoing global reshaping of the energy landscape:
decarbonisation, decentralisation and digitisation.