Energy Technology Perspectives: Scenarios And Strategies to by OECD

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Extra info for Energy Technology Perspectives: Scenarios And Strategies to 2050

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It outlines the barriers to their implementation and the measures that may be needed to overcome them. It explores how they can change our energy future. The International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook (WEO 2005) projects that unless current policies change global energy-related CO2 emissions will grow by more than 50% from 2003 levels by 2030 and oil demand by 45%. Fossil fuels will meet 85 % of the world’s incremental energy needs. The WEO further foresees that most of the new CO2 emissions and increased demand for energy will come from developing countries.

The share of coal in the buildings sector is unchanged, at roughly 1%. The share of oil use in industry in 2050 declines from 25% in the Baseline Scenario to 19% in the Map scenario, while its share is unchanged in the buildings sector. In 2050, the share of gas use in industry increases from 25% in the Baseline Scenario to 32% in the Map scenario. Electricity increases its share in total final consumption from 16% in 2003 to 21% in 2050 in the Map scenario, despite significant energy efficiency gains.

It provides analysis of their status and prospects. It outlines the barriers to their implementation and the measures that may be needed to overcome them. It explores how they can change our energy future. The International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook (WEO 2005) projects that unless current policies change global energy-related CO2 emissions will grow by more than 50% from 2003 levels by 2030 and oil demand by 45%. Fossil fuels will meet 85 % of the world’s incremental energy needs. The WEO further foresees that most of the new CO2 emissions and increased demand for energy will come from developing countries.

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