Increasing energy efficiency is commonly viewed as providing a key stimulus to economic growth, through investment in efficient technologies, reducing energy use and costs, enabling productivity gains, and generating jobs. However, this view is received wisdom, as empirical validation has remained elusive. A central problem is that current energy-economy models are not thermodynamically consistent, since they do not include the transformation of energy in physical terms from primary to end-use stages. In response, we develop the UK MAcroeconometric Resource COnsumption (MARCO-UK) model, the first econometric economy-wide model to explicitly include thermodynamic efficiency and end energy use (energy services). We find gains in thermodynamic...
The role of energy efficiency in reducing household energy efficiency and emissions has long been re...
Improved energy efficiency is generally recognised as the most important and cost-effective route to...
Energy plays only a minor role in orthodox theories of economic growth, because standard economic eq...
This chapter presents a new field of research – termed exergy economics – which offers a new perspec...
This chapter presents a new field of research – termed exergy economics – which offers a new perspec...
Recent contributions by Brookes (1990), Saunders (1992), and Inhaber and Saunders (1994) argue that ...
The global climate challenge is keeping below a 2⁰C global temperature rise (versus pre-industrial l...
Assessments of the feasibility of decoupling energy consumption from economic growth could benefit f...
Energy efficiency has gained significant policy and research attention for over a number of years, b...
Since the 1970s more efficient energy use in OECD countries has weakened or eliminated the link betw...
Climate change mitigation challenges national economies to increase productivity while reducing foss...
The majority of global energy scenarios anticipate a structural break in the relationship between en...
In basic economic growth models, energy is neglected as a production factor, and output is generated...
Overreliance on energy from fossil fuels is unsustainable because of their regional depletion and as...
This article attempts to summarise the complex, wide ranging and unresolved debate within the econom...
The role of energy efficiency in reducing household energy efficiency and emissions has long been re...
Improved energy efficiency is generally recognised as the most important and cost-effective route to...
Energy plays only a minor role in orthodox theories of economic growth, because standard economic eq...
This chapter presents a new field of research – termed exergy economics – which offers a new perspec...
This chapter presents a new field of research – termed exergy economics – which offers a new perspec...
Recent contributions by Brookes (1990), Saunders (1992), and Inhaber and Saunders (1994) argue that ...
The global climate challenge is keeping below a 2⁰C global temperature rise (versus pre-industrial l...
Assessments of the feasibility of decoupling energy consumption from economic growth could benefit f...
Energy efficiency has gained significant policy and research attention for over a number of years, b...
Since the 1970s more efficient energy use in OECD countries has weakened or eliminated the link betw...
Climate change mitigation challenges national economies to increase productivity while reducing foss...
The majority of global energy scenarios anticipate a structural break in the relationship between en...
In basic economic growth models, energy is neglected as a production factor, and output is generated...
Overreliance on energy from fossil fuels is unsustainable because of their regional depletion and as...
This article attempts to summarise the complex, wide ranging and unresolved debate within the econom...
The role of energy efficiency in reducing household energy efficiency and emissions has long been re...
Improved energy efficiency is generally recognised as the most important and cost-effective route to...
Energy plays only a minor role in orthodox theories of economic growth, because standard economic eq...