Sentences with phrase «global energy supplied»

The section on economic growth and free trade contains a short paragraph devoted to enhancing energy security, pledging «to expand the sources and types of global energy supplied, especially in the Western Hemisphere, Africa, and the Caspian region.»
«However, it will be decades before they take a major share of the global energy supply
The world's energy needs are continuing to grow and global energy supply is under stress.
This exhaustive yet accessible look at the global energy supply weighs the future of fossil fuels and carefully considers the alternatives.
As a share of global energy supply, nuclear power has actually contracted since 1993, and not just because of high - profile setbacks like the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in Japan.
On that front, no one has better articulated the blunt reality of more than doubling the global energy supply (even with efficiency improvements) while deeply cutting emissions of greenhouse gases than Martin Hoffert of New York University and various colleagues.
The result is a suite of 160 clean and neat «what if» scenarios, but very little (at least if the summary reflects what's coming in the full 900 - page report at the end of the month) on how the more aggressive scenarios for cleaning up the global energy supply might actually be achieved in the real world of competing and conflicting national, corporate and personal interests.
The current debate will soon be rendered moot as global energy supplies enter a new phase of terminal decline and take the industrialized worlds grossly disproportionate levels of affluence down with them.
Krewitt et al, 2009: «A 10 - region global energy system model implemented in the MESAP - PlaNet environment (MESAP, 2008) is used for simulating global energy supply strategies.»
• Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage (2006) • Energy Sector Methane Recovery and Use Initiative (2007) • IEA Energy Technology Essentials: Biofuel Production, Biomass Power for Power Generation and CHP, CO2 Capture and Storage, Fuel Cells, Hydrogen Production and Distribution, Nuclear Power (2007 & 2006) • International CHP / DHC Collaborative (2007) • International Energy Technology Co-operation — Frequently Asked Questions (Chinese, Russian)(2006/7) • Renewables in Global Energy Supply (2007) • Energy Technology Perspectives Fact Sheets: Buildings and Appliances; Electricity Generation; Industry; Road Transport Technologies and Fuels; and Scenario Analysis (2006)
note 2; hydropower, including tidal and wave, from IEA, Renewables in Global Energy Supply: An IEA Fact Sheet, pp. 13, 25, at www.iea.org/textbase; rooftop solar water and space heaters from IEA, Solar Heating and Cooling Program, Solar Heat Worldwide: Markets and Contribution to the Energy Supply 2005 (Paris: April 2007); REN21, op.
Renewable energy's share of the global energy supply has increased from 7 % by 2004 to over 8 % by 2009 and 2010 (excluding traditional biofuels such as fuelwood and charcoal).
It is clear that coal will continue to play a crucial role in global energy supply.
Under the IEA scenario, the share of the global energy supply provided by low - carbon sources would more than triple to 70 % in 2050.
Most projections have assumed that energetic inputs are either irrelevant for the demographic transition or that global energy supplies will be sufficient to fuel the economic growth that underlies the demographic transition [1], [3].
Only slow progress will be made until people get over their fears and beliefs that nuclear is unsafe, that renewables can make a substantial contribution to global energy supply, and that fossil fuels are evil.
At present, 80 % of the global energy supply is provided by fossil fuels.
Currently, direct solar contributes only a fraction of one percent to total global energy supply.
Due to its nascent stage of development, they are unlikely to significantly contribute to global energy supply before 2020.
In this respect, developing economies are especially sensitive to fluctuations in global energy supply and demand.
BP's Energy Outlook provides global energy supply and demand forecasts through 2035.
Each year, ExxonMobil produces the Outlook for Energy — which provides educated estimates about global energy supply and demand and other economic trends — in order to help guide our internal business and investment decisions.
While sectoral economic transitions are largely outside the domain and impact of energy policy, and deindustrialization is hardly a global strategy for rapid decarbonization, it appears that history presents at least one replicable strategy to accelerate the pace of decarbonization: the directed decarbonization of global energy supplies via the state - led development and deployment of scalable zero - carbon energy technologies.
«We are truly witnessing a changing of the guard of global energy suppliers,» BP Chief Economist Spencer Dale said in a presentation.
An enduring aspect of the EIA's lack of attention to the urgency of the climate crisis is the lack of a projection of U.S. and / or global energy supply and demand that reflects the nation's stated commitments to address climate change.
We also wrote in the same article in 2002: «The ultimate agenda of pro-Kyoto advocates is to eliminate fossil fuels, but this would result in a catastrophic shortfall in global energy supply — the wasteful, inefficient energy solutions proposed by Kyoto advocates simply can not replace fossil fuels.»
Mr. FREDERIC HAUGE (Director, Bellona): As long as the global energy supply is 80 percent fossil fuel, there is no way around this.
The data above come from a useful factsheet produced by the International Energy Agency in 2007, entitled Renewables in Global Energy Supply.
What I see as being important is not rationing of energy nor more expensive energy, but increasing the global energy supply to all, and driving down the cost of energy as low as possible.
It ensures the security of our global energy supply over the coming years and provides the affordable energy on which growth and jobs depend.
«In the aftermath of the March 2011 accident at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the future contribution of nuclear power to the global energy supply has become somewhat uncertain.
Overall that would require more than one tenth of the present annual global energy supply to balance the current rate of sea - level rise.
But, as the FT reported, Nobuo Tanaka, the chief executive of the International Energy Agency, has warned that the role of nuclear power in global energy supply may be less than previously forecast, following the events in Japan.

Not exact matches

The acceptance of the notion that global oil demand will peak within a generation is mind - blowing given that, just a decade ago, the chatter in the energy world was about a coming peak in oil supply.
Global oil supply rose in June as compliance with an OPEC - led deal to freeze production showed signs that it was stalling, the International Energy Agency (IEA) noted in its latest market report on Thursday.
On Thursday, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said global oil supply increased in February by 700,000 barrels per day (bpd) from a year ago to 97.9 million barrels per day.
The U.S. Department of Energy estimated «technically recoverable» shale oil resources of 345 billion barrels in 42 countries it surveyed, or 10 percent of global crude supplies.
CNBC's Jackie DeAngelis speaks to Mohammed Barkindo, OPEC secretary general, about Trump administration energy policies, as well as global oil supply.
Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are the following: (1) worldwide economic, political, and capital markets conditions and other factors beyond the Company's control, including natural and other disasters or climate change affecting the operations of the Company or its customers and suppliers; (2) the Company's credit ratings and its cost of capital; (3) competitive conditions and customer preferences; (4) foreign currency exchange rates and fluctuations in those rates; (5) the timing and market acceptance of new product offerings; (6) the availability and cost of purchased components, compounds, raw materials and energy (including oil and natural gas and their derivatives) due to shortages, increased demand or supply interruptions (including those caused by natural and other disasters and other events); (7) the impact of acquisitions, strategic alliances, divestitures, and other unusual events resulting from portfolio management actions and other evolving business strategies, and possible organizational restructuring; (8) generating fewer productivity improvements than estimated; (9) unanticipated problems or delays with the phased implementation of a global enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, or security breaches and other disruptions to the Company's information technology infrastructure; (10) financial market risks that may affect the Company's funding obligations under defined benefit pension and postretirement plans; and (11) legal proceedings, including significant developments that could occur in the legal and regulatory proceedings described in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10 - K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, and any subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10 - Q (the «Reports»).
Meanwhile, the world's nearly 8 billion people and $ 80 trillion economy depend on hydrocarbons to supply over 80 % of global energy; oil fuels 98 % of transportation.
We supply most of the energy and food consumed at home, providing a cushion against swings in global commodity prices.
The global energy market is undergoing significant change — from the development of technologies that are dramatically increasing the energy supply to the emergence of alternative energy sources — creating the potential to reshape economies and industries.
In March this year, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said that unless the industry approves fresh investments in new projects, global oil supply may be struggling to catch up with demand after 2020, which could result in a sharp jump in oil prices.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that an average of 800,000 barrels per day in production were taken offline last month, contributing greatly to May's having the highest monthly level of unplanned global oil supply disruptions since the agency began tracking such data in 2011.
May 2, 2018 Global Energy Metals Releases Part Three in the Visual Capitalist Series on The Rise of Tesla Highlighting the Reliance on Sourcing Supply of Cobalt and other Raw Materials to Meet its Future Vision
Description: Global Energy Metals (TSX - V: GEMC, OTCQB: GBLEF, FSE: 5GE1) is focused on offering security of supply of cobalt, a critical material to the growing rechargeable battery market, by building a diversified global portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other supply soGlobal Energy Metals (TSX - V: GEMC, OTCQB: GBLEF, FSE: 5GE1) is focused on offering security of supply of cobalt, a critical material to the growing rechargeable battery market, by building a diversified global portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other supply soglobal portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other supply sources.
However, this signaled to investors that rising supply from the U.S. would continue to depress global oil prices, and further drag energy shares down.
A more than 55 percent decline in crude oil CLc1 since last year has rippled through the global energy industry, forcing producers and their suppliers to make tough decisions.
Canada is an important global energy producer and the largest supplier of energy products to the United States.
Thus the wage gains are from a one time energy glut brought about by increased supply from fracking, lower demand from a weak global economy, and some producers increasing production to make up for lower prices (not entirely self defeating as consumer nations expand inventories while prices are low).
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