Most ebook files are in PDF format, so you can easily read them using various software such as Foxit Reader or directly on the Google Chrome browser.
Some ebook files are released by publishers in other formats such as .awz, .mobi, .epub, .fb2, etc. You may need to install specific software to read these formats on mobile/PC, such as Calibre.
Please read the tutorial at this link: https://ebookbell.com/faq
We offer FREE conversion to the popular formats you request; however, this may take some time. Therefore, right after payment, please email us, and we will try to provide the service as quickly as possible.
For some exceptional file formats or broken links (if any), please refrain from opening any disputes. Instead, email us first, and we will try to assist within a maximum of 6 hours.
EbookBell Team
4.8
54 reviewsISBN 13: 9780230221529
Author: I Scrase, G MacKerron
Cutting carbon emissions is urgent but very challenging in wealthy democracies. Energy for the Future analyzes the changing contexts, imperatives and fault lines, and proposes ways forwards. Greater public engagement and a new approach to markets are vital, but traditional concerns with energy security and economic efficiency cannot be set aside.
Part I: The Energy Policy Agenda
1 Introduction: Climate Policy is Energy Policy
1.1 Energy policy in context
1.2 Energy security and energy 'shocks'
1.3 Climate change in a global perspective
1.4 Energy for the future: An overview of the new agenda
2 International Regimes for Energy: Finding the Right Level for Policy
2.1 Governing energy at the global level
2.2 Regional governance: A better fit?
2.3 Making energy and climate policy: A multilevel challenge
3 Energy Issues: Framing and Policy Change
3.1 A discourse perspective
3.2 Energy policy goals, positions and debates
3.3 Reframing energy policy?
4 Energy Governance: The Challenges of Sustainability
4.1 Today's problems, yesterday's governance
4.2 Inherited energy systems, sustainable transformations
4.3 Generic challenges for sustainable energy governance
4.4 Empowering energy policy
5 Lessons from the UK on Urgency and Legitimacy in Energy Policymaking
5.1 Energy policy in the UK, 1945–2000
5.2 The new energy debate after 2000
5.3 Reconciling urgency and legitimacy
6 Lock-In
6.1 An evolutionary perspective: Evidence and theory
6.2 'Free' market ideology and practice as a barrier to transitions
6.3 Competition is not everything
Part II: Towards a New Agenda
7 Deliberative Socio-Technical Transitions
7.1 Technocracy in energy policy: A critique
7.2 Promoting transitions through deliberation, scenarios and learning
7.3 Deliberative energy policymaking for transitions
8 Technology Assessment and Innovation Policy
8.1 Not picking winners?
8.2 Setting future priorities
8.3 Playing to national strengths: The UK example
9 Distributed Generation: Transforming the Electricity Network
9.1 Distributed generation
9.2 The infrastructure and governance challenges
9.3 Network transformation
9.4 Politics, policy and regulation
10 Energy and the Citizen
10.1 Home energy: A green future?
10.2 Individual and community action: Removing barriers
10.3 Limits to choice?
10.4 Energy efficiency and energy services
10.5 From rhetoric to action
11 Carbon Trading
11.1 The role of carbon trading
11.2 The EU Emissions Trading Scheme
11.3 Economic, social and environmental considerations
11.4 Carbon trading in the UK
11.5 Making carbon trading effective
12 Global Energy Solutions?
12.1 The potential for global technical fixes
12.2 Technology transfer
12.3 From competition to cooperation
Part III: Conclusions and Policy Implications
13 Conclusions: Transitions, Governance and Appraisal
13.1 Transitions
13.2 Governance
13.3 Appraisal
14 Energy Policy Implications
14.1 New principles and approaches
14.2 Stimulating infrastructure and technology change
14.3 Reforming institutions and markets
14.4 Building authority and legitimacy in government
14.5 The new agenda
a new form of energy
the energy future
new energy sources for the future
center for the new energy economy
future energy development
dec energy update 2022
Tags: I Scrase, G MacKerron, Energy, Future