Sentences with phrase «global energy economy»

Climate science, even at its most uncontroversial, could never motivate the remaking of the entire global energy economy.
The ethical and pragmatic path toward a just and sustainable global energy economy requires that human beings transition as rapidly as possible to energy sources that are cheap, clean, dense, and abundant.
According to Taylor, Gogoro's potential for success rides on the global energy economy.
And that's a shame, because it's hard to envision Canada competing in a global energy economy that is ever - more reliant on big data if our energy data and analytical capacity remain inconsistent, scattered, and small.
Recent cancellations of Alberta tar sands / oil sands projects point to the uphill battle the industry will face as innovation transforms the global energy economy,...
Recent cancellations of Alberta tar sands / oil sands projects point to the uphill battle the industry will face as innovation transforms the global energy economy, Jerry Oppenheim of the New Climate Economy project told an event last month hosted by Corporate Knights and Sustainable Prosperity.
«However, reaching the full potential for PV technology in the global energy economy will require continued advances in science and technology.
It makes this all seem a lot harder — the challenge of decarbonizing a global energy economy as we head toward 9 billion people seeking better lives — but I think it's doable.
An assessment belied by the fact that quite a few nations met their Kyoto goals and have already achieved significant emissions reductions...; that Paris NDCs are much more inclusive and ambitious, and there is already visible action toward meeting them... the global energy economy is visibly changing now.
The global energy economy is now in a transition period away from dirty coal and toward the «Golden Age of Gas» (a phrase developed by the International Energy Agency).
Heads of state and international delegates will convene in Paris in late 2015 to try to deliver a deal that puts the global energy economy on the path to zero emissions.
The 20 - year effort by environmentalists to establish climate science as the primary basis for far - reaching action to decarbonize the global energy economy today lies in ruins.
Squaring our desire to mitigate climate change with the stubborn realities of the global energy economy will require that we accelerate the rate at which our technologies improve, a process that economists still don't understand very well and their models have little capability to predict.
The Kyoto framework, which imagined that carbon pollution limits could be the primary driver of the complete transformation of the global energy economy, has irretrievably failed.
Transforming the global energy economy from fossil fuels to low - carbon alternatives over the next 50 to 100 years is such a monumental technological undertaking that it is quite understandable that many would either declare it impossible or retreat into magical thinking.
However, geopolitics and the global energy economy are both changing.
To address climate change, the global energy economy needs to be fundamentally restructured.
That is, the normal dynamics of market commercialization will not suffice to revolutionize the global energy economy and solve the climate problem.
With increasing complexity in the global energy economy, and the increasing advent of unidentified risks, it becomes more difficult to attract and include the diverse range of investments needed to address the existing energy deficit.
The resulting large - format book, Energy: Overdevelopment and the Delusion of Endless Growth explores the impacts of the global energy economy: from oil spills and mountaintop - removal coal mining to oversized wind farms and desert - destroying solar power plants.
GG: In the long term, it's clear that the problem of carbon emissions can only be solved by a radical transformation of the global energy economy.
One might even have the temerity to suggest that it is indeed not the most important element needed to transform the global energy economy without «dismissing» the need for regulation.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z