Research Article

What is the Speed of Energy Transition

Number: 3 May 1, 2017
  • Barış Şanlı
EN

What is the Speed of Energy Transition

Abstract

The headlines like “coming age of renewables” or “phasing out of coal” seems likely to happen in a matter of years. Despite having these changes already initiated, the speed is a matter of question for investors as well as consumers.

After Paris agreement, “stranded asset” discussions were widespread. The oil and coal companies have been warned to be careful for having stranded assets. Making matter worse, as the commodity prices plunged, it became an imminent threat for shareholders. From the IPO of Saudi Aramco to the bankruptcy filing of coal powerhouse Peabody, the economic fortunes of the fossil fuel companies are closely monitored and analyzed.

In this article, the speed of energy transition within an analytical framework will be investigated. By using data from IEA World Energy Balances database, historical energy transition speeds will be examined for the world and different countries. A hypothetical country’s energy transition to solar and electric cars is briefly introduced in the last part.

The findings suggest that transition speed is constrained by technology in several parts of the energy system (infrastructure, production, consumption). One of the fastest transitions in OECD countries happened in France. Even in Germany, pace is slower than expected. The developmental stage is also affecting the speed.

Keywords

References

  1. 1. Yergin, Daniel. 2008. The prize: the epic quest for oil, money & power. New York: Free Press. 2. (Placeholder1)Bennet, James. November 2015, “An Interview with Bill Gates on the Future of Energy”, The Atlantic, https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/11/we-need-anenergy-miracle/407881/ 3. Dale, Spencer. 8 June 2016, “Energy in 2015 : A year of plenty”, BP presentation http://www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/pdf/energy-economics/statistical-review-2016/bp-statistical-reviewof- world-energy-2016-spencer-dale-presentation.pdf 4 Kazokoglu, Cüneyt. 2 February 2017, “2 Şubat 2017”. http://barissanli.com/eak/2017/02/02/2-subat-2017/ 5 Vietor, Richard. Energy Policy in America Since 1945: A Study of Business-Government Relations. Cambridge University Press, 1984. 6 Unit Converter, IEA, 2016, https://www.iea.org/statistics/resources/unitconverter/

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

Barış Şanlı This is me
Türkiye

Publication Date

May 1, 2017

Submission Date

September 28, 2017

Acceptance Date

-

Published in Issue

Year 2017 Number: 3

APA
Şanlı, B. (2017). What is the Speed of Energy Transition. Energy Policy Turkey, 3, 64-74. https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH
AMA
1.Şanlı B. What is the Speed of Energy Transition. Energy Policy Turkey. 2017;(3):64-74. https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH
Chicago
Şanlı, Barış. 2017. “What Is the Speed of Energy Transition”. Energy Policy Turkey, nos. 3: 64-74. https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH.
EndNote
Şanlı B (May 1, 2017) What is the Speed of Energy Transition. Energy Policy Turkey 3 64–74.
IEEE
[1]B. Şanlı, “What is the Speed of Energy Transition”, Energy Policy Turkey, no. 3, pp. 64–74, May 2017, [Online]. Available: https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH
ISNAD
Şanlı, Barış. “What Is the Speed of Energy Transition”. Energy Policy Turkey. 3 (May 1, 2017): 64-74. https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH.
JAMA
1.Şanlı B. What is the Speed of Energy Transition. Energy Policy Turkey. 2017;:64–74.
MLA
Şanlı, Barış. “What Is the Speed of Energy Transition”. Energy Policy Turkey, no. 3, May 2017, pp. 64-74, https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH.
Vancouver
1.Barış Şanlı. What is the Speed of Energy Transition. Energy Policy Turkey [Internet]. 2017 May 1;(3):64-7. Available from: https://izlik.org/JA22BL75DH

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