© 2019, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. The objective of this paper is to assess the potential of natural gas as a transition fuel towards a low- and zero-carbon economy. We use the previously established global energy market model (GEM) to first provide a close match of the historical energy mix and the associated carbon levels. The model is then used to make simulations of how the energy mix and carbon quantities would evolve in the long distant future—the year 2150—if past dynamics were an indication of the future. A similar GEM modeling exercise was carried out in a previous work, using historical data up to the year 2005, showing that natural gas would help slow global carbon growth in the next 50–100 years, thus...
Briefly considers the history of global energy development as an introduction to the findings of a 1...
This paper briefly surveys the history of natural gas use and describes the main features of current...
Is natural gas the ‘bridge’ to our low-carbon future? In power generation, industrial processes, par...
We use global energy market (GEM) model to show that natural gas has the potential to help stabilize...
Copyright 2017, Society of Petroleum Engineers. The objective of this paper is to estimate the long-...
This project uses the global TIMES Integrated Assessment Model in UCL (‘TIAM-UCL’) to provide robust...
As global energy demand rises, natural gas now plays an important strategic role in energy supply. I...
The global energy sector is undergoing a global transformation under the influence of technological ...
In the debate about the impact of the Energy Transition on the current global energy system it is be...
Natural gas has the potential to facilitate the transition to a low-carbon energy system and society...
The pathway to a low carbon future primarily depends on a nation’s availability of energy resources,...
This thesis intends to answer the following research question: What role will natural gas serve in t...
Natural gas is expected to play an important role in the coming low-carbon energy transition. Howeve...
As the Asia Pacific region continues to experience rapid economic growth, natural gas may have an im...
As the world transitions toward a low-carbon energy economy, two features of natural gas set it apar...
Briefly considers the history of global energy development as an introduction to the findings of a 1...
This paper briefly surveys the history of natural gas use and describes the main features of current...
Is natural gas the ‘bridge’ to our low-carbon future? In power generation, industrial processes, par...
We use global energy market (GEM) model to show that natural gas has the potential to help stabilize...
Copyright 2017, Society of Petroleum Engineers. The objective of this paper is to estimate the long-...
This project uses the global TIMES Integrated Assessment Model in UCL (‘TIAM-UCL’) to provide robust...
As global energy demand rises, natural gas now plays an important strategic role in energy supply. I...
The global energy sector is undergoing a global transformation under the influence of technological ...
In the debate about the impact of the Energy Transition on the current global energy system it is be...
Natural gas has the potential to facilitate the transition to a low-carbon energy system and society...
The pathway to a low carbon future primarily depends on a nation’s availability of energy resources,...
This thesis intends to answer the following research question: What role will natural gas serve in t...
Natural gas is expected to play an important role in the coming low-carbon energy transition. Howeve...
As the Asia Pacific region continues to experience rapid economic growth, natural gas may have an im...
As the world transitions toward a low-carbon energy economy, two features of natural gas set it apar...
Briefly considers the history of global energy development as an introduction to the findings of a 1...
This paper briefly surveys the history of natural gas use and describes the main features of current...
Is natural gas the ‘bridge’ to our low-carbon future? In power generation, industrial processes, par...