Sentences with phrase «energy research trends»

Internationally, government energy research trends are little different from those in the United States.

Not exact matches

His research provides strategic insights to institutional clients and has a specific focus on how disruptive trends in energy, strategic metals, and technology create opportunities.
* Energy markets * China government reorg * China economy * The Inflationary Impact of Ageing * Our Brave New World * Kings of Content * Canadian banks * Grocery price comps * HD vs LOW * Disney and Fox * Bank of Ozark * Demographics * Bitcoin * Rethinking Transportation 2020 - 2030 * Internet trends * Global markets outlook * Good research: Canadian Banks, Citigroup * Regime change to lead to lower returns?
Jonathan has led numerous research efforts on global economic trends, including growth and productivity, urbanization, affordable housing, energy and sustainability, e-commerce, and the economic impact of the Internet, as well as on productivity growth and economic development in China and Asia.
Our investment team's research has shown that when the one - month reading crossed below the three - month trend, there was a significant probability that materials, energy and commodities would fall six months later.
«Our analysis of the energy price shock and top of the housing cycle, means that we look for a moderating consumer trend to continue,» UBS said in a research note on Tuesday.
Last week I had the pleasure of attending Austin - based research firm ZPryme's annual Energy Thought Summit, which brought together business leaders and technical experts to discuss emerging energy technologies and tEnergy Thought Summit, which brought together business leaders and technical experts to discuss emerging energy technologies and tenergy technologies and trends.
In the future, public health workers could monitor trends on social media to quickly identify a rise of influenza, depression or other health issues in a specific area, thanks to research at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory are applying atmospheric science research capabilities to improve our understanding of long - term weather trends and better predict extreme weather events like these — and it all starts with studying clouds.
As part of GGC's ongoing research in the increasingly pervasive trend of Positive Energy gaining...
[Comment 36 from earlier post provides links showing energy - research budget trends.]
In a packed room, Chu gave his trademark illustrated tutorial, leading from basic climate science through the disturbing implications of global energy trends and efforts by the Obama administration to stimulate energy innovation with research hubs and dozens of grants for work on the frontiers of energy sciences that might produce breakthroughs.
These inherent weaknesses in our evolved civilisation (to date) ensure that mankind will NOT reach 8 billion people given current negative trends in oil recovery, negative trends in alternative energy research and continued investment in immigration and large families.
In any case, a more important analysis was the agency's fresh look at trends in government support for research, development and demonstration of low - carbon energy technologies and ways for countries to collaborate to accelerate energy innovation.
On the energy / emissions trends, we're about the only publication I know of that has given sustained, in - depth coverage to the glaring lack of energy research, the limits of current efforts (including the existing renewables markets), and the real - world choices that faces a species heading toward 9 billion people, all of whom would love the gifts that come with ample energy.
Paul Nastu founded Environmental Leader LLC in 2006, with the objective of creating a research and media company to cover environmental and energy management products, trends, data and news.
As others have noted, the IPCC Team has gone absolutely feral about Salby's research and the most recent paper by Dr Roy Spencer, at the University of Alabama (On the Misdiagnosis of Surface Temperature Feedbacks from Variations in Earth's Radiant Energy Balance), for one simple reason: both are based on empirical, undoctored satellite observations, which, depending on the measure required, now extend into the past by up to 32 years, i.e. long enough to begin evaluating real climate trends; whereas much of the Team's science in AR4 (2007) is based on primitive climate models generated from primitive and potentially unreliable land measurements and proxies, which have been «filtered» to achieve certain artificial realities (There are other more scathing descriptions of this process I won't use).
«The heart of this document is in tracking cost, price and performance trends,» said Ryan Wiser of the report he and U.S. Department of Energy Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory research partner Mark Bolinger wrote on numbers and trends.
Peter Marsters is a Research Analyst at Rhodium Group and draws on an interdisciplinary background in economics, engineering, and public policy to analyze the latest energy and environmental trends.
Our research focuses on long - term trends relevant to the environment, including changes in population, transportation, energy, land use, and industrial materials, as well as past, present, and future states of plant and animal populations on land and in the oceans.
Primarily focused on the residential and small - scale commercial solar market, EnergySage's new report is a complement to the quarterly research produced by GTM Research and Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA), which centers more on industry - wide macroeconomicresearch produced by GTM Research and Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA), which centers more on industry - wide macroeconomicResearch and Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA), which centers more on industry - wide macroeconomic trends.
(2) Research on the trends in energy return on energy invested (EROI) for fossil fuels undergoing the inevitable decline.
«Clearly, looking at long - term trends, these technologies are making major inroads, absolutely and dramatically changing the U.S. energy system,» Michel Di Capua, head of research for the Americas region at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, told Greenergy system,» Michel Di Capua, head of research for the Americas region at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, told GreEnergy Finance, told GreenBiz.
Glen Peters of the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Norway comments: Emissions growth in the next few years will depend on whether energy and climate policies can lock in the new trends, and importantly, raise the ambition of emission pledges to be more consistent with the temperature goals of the Paris Agreement.
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