With Asia's rapidly growing
need for energy imports in the early 2000s, Canada hoped to reduce its almost 100 % reliance on the United States as an export market for oil and natural gas by expanding to Asia.
With Asia's rapidly growing
need for energy imports in the early 2000s, Canada hoped to reduce its almost 100 % reliance on the United...
When DLR is high, the extra energy stays in the skin layer, reducing
the need for energy import from below.
Not exact matches
She mentioned that, despite the shale - oil boom, the U.S. would continue to
need energy imports «
for a very long time.»
It also ignores the fact that cities, New York,
for example are totally unsustainable and require the mass
import of
energy and food to survive; and yet, I see little in the New York Times editorial page about the
need to break up such
energy sinks.
The Annual
Energy Outlook projecting United States energy trends through 2030 foresees flat demand for oil, a shrinking need for imports and enormous expansion of the percentage of light vehicles with hybrid fuel - electric propu
Energy Outlook projecting United States
energy trends through 2030 foresees flat demand for oil, a shrinking need for imports and enormous expansion of the percentage of light vehicles with hybrid fuel - electric propu
energy trends through 2030 foresees flat demand
for oil, a shrinking
need for imports and enormous expansion of the percentage of light vehicles with hybrid fuel - electric propulsion.
As EIA projects, the United States will continue to use oil well into the future, and more
imports would increase U.S. dependency on others
for its
energy needs.
When mitigating anthropogenic global warming is projected to require greater than 80 % lower fossil
energy use, how do we provide the transport fuel and
energy for rapid growth by developing countries while sustaining OECD economic growth when the Available Net Exports of crude oil — after China and India's
imports — have already declined 13 % since 2005, and Saudi Arabia may
need to
import oil by 2030?
The New York Times noted: «Germany is now heavily reliant on Russia
for its
energy needs,
importing more natural gas from Russia than any other country in Europe.»
We
need to stop spending more and more on
imported energy and power plants, and use the money to pay
for what people really
need: better and more sustainable living standards.
The report then showed how renewable
energy could be used to meet that new level of demand, reducing and ultimately eliminating the
need for imports.
Renewable
energy could help reduce that so - called «fuel - security risk,» but also compel more fossil fuel plant retirements, compounding the
need for more LNG
imports.
In announcing his appointment, IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven said that Mr. Millard's work at DECC «resulted in the production of quality data meeting both national and international
needs, as well as establishing new approaches
for monitoring
energy efficiency policies, improving the timeliness of data, e.g. quarterly renewables data, and new analysis such as diversity measures in oil and gas
imports».
More renewable
energy could lessen the fuel security risk, the study noted, but would also force coal and oil - fired generation retirements, boosting the
need for liquified natural gas
imports.
By Hannu Vaananen Europe
needs to become more intelligent if it is to stop paying more than one billion USD every day
for imported energy The share of
imported energy in Europe is growing and every day it pays more than one billion USD
for its
energy dependency, one that also has