Monday, April 9, 2012

EU's Energy efficiency goal not on track

The EU's 20% energy efficiency improving is not on track for 2020.
The Danish presidency has made the Energy Efficiency Directive a priority until June. This ambitious goal is a means to create green jobs in building renovations as well as a way of cutting consumer spending and dependence on expensive energy imports.
But some utilities and EU countries are resisting it, leading to a weak proposal to close the gap.

More information: EU Energy Savings Plan Too Weak: Green Campaigners

Energy efficiency is a business opportunity

According to the director at Delta Energy and Environment, a consulting firm, energy efficiency is a business opportunity as soon as the EU's Energy Efficiency Directive is approved.
A utility interested in improving energy efficiency [they] tried telling customers "you could save money". The customers were not interested. They tried telling customers "you could save the environment". The customers were not interested. They told their customers "you are doing the right thing for the country, you are increasing energy efficiency". The customers were not interested. But when they told their customers "here is how you are using energy compared to how other customers use energy, they were suddenly interested.”



More information: Energy efficiency is a business opportunity

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Carbon Trust launches ‘Empower’ tool to help employees save energy

Carbon Trust has just released a new tool to help employees save energy: Empower
Watch the video and start saving energy!

Monday, December 26, 2011

IEA - Solar energy could be competitive within 20 years

A new publication by the IEA refers that solar energy could be competitive within 20 years.
Again this depends on the right policies specially in sunny places where economic growth occurring.
Integrating all solar technologies in a system-oriented policy approach will unlock the potential of solar energy within the broader set of low-carbon technologies

Paolo Frankl, head of IEA’s renewable energy division

Energy: Roadmap 2050

The European Commission adopted on the 15th December the Roadmap 2050 for Energy.
Based on the analysis of a set of scenarios, the document describes the consequences of a carbon free energy system and the policy framework needed. This should allow member states to make the required energy choices and create a stable business climate for private investment, especially until 2030.
The Energy Roadmap 2050 identifies a number of elements which have positive impacts in all circumstances, and thus define some key outcomes such as:
- Decarbonisation of the energy system is technically and economically feasible. All decarbonisation scenarios allow achieving the emission reduction target and can be less costly than current policies in the long-run.
- Energy Efficiency and renewable energy are critical. Irrespective of the particular energy mix chosen, higher energy efficiency and important rising shares of renewables are necessary to meet the CO2 targets in 2050. The scenarios also show that electricity will play a greater role than now. Gas, oil, coal and nuclear also figure in all scenarios in different proportions, allowing Member States to keep flexible options in their energy mix provided a well connected internal market is achieved quickly.
- Early Investments cost less. Investment decisions for the necessary infrastructure up to 2030 must be taken now, as infrastructure built 30-40 years ago needs to be replaced. Acting immediately can avoid more costly changes in twenty years. The EU's energy evolution requires anyway modernisation and much more flexible infrastructure such as cross border interconnections, "intelligent" electricity grids and modern low-carbon technologies to produce, transmit and store energy.
- Contain the increase of prices. The investments made now will pave the way for the best prices in the future. Electricity prices are bound to raise until 2030, but can fall thereafter thanks to lower cost of supply, saving policies and improved technologies. The costs will be outweighed by the high level of sustainable investment brought into the European economy, the related local jobs, and the decreased import dependency. All scenarios get to decarbonisation with no major differences in terms of overall costs or security of supply implications.
- Economies of scale are needed. A European approach will result in lower costs and secure supply compared to national parallel schemes. This includes a common energy market which should be completed by 2014.


More information:
Press release
Roadmap 2050

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Homes responsible for one quarter of European greenhouse emissions from energy

A new report from the EEA states that european homes are responsible for 25 % of greenhouse emissions from energy:
Home energy use is responsible overall for 25 % of energy-related greenhouse gas emissions in the European Union (EU), according to a new analysis from the European Environment Agency (EEA). The report calculates emissions based on their 'end use', or the sector using the energy. Homes in the EU only emit 12 % of energy emissions directly, but this doubles when related emissions from power plants and district heating are factored in.