This article predicts future global energy demand under a business-as-usual scenario. According to the MIT projections, conventional technology supported by fossil fuels will continue to dominate under a business-as-usual scenario. In fact, in the absence of climate policies that would impact energy prices, fossil fuels will supply nearly 80% of global primary energy demand in 2100. Alternative energy technologies will expand rapidly. Non-fossil fuel use will grow from 13% to 20% by 2100, with renewable electricity production expanding nearly tenfold and nuclear energy increasing by a factor of 8.5. However, those sources currently provide such a small share of the world's energy that even rapid growth is not enough to significantly displace fossil fuels. In spite of the growth in renewables, the projections indicate that coal will remain among the least expensive fuel sources. Non-fossil fuel alternatives, such as renewable energy and nuclear energy, will be between 40% and 80% more expensive than coal.
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January 2011
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Myth v. Fact
Before we can Embrace Appropriate Energy Policies, We have to Face the Hard Truths about the Technologies Available to us.
John Reilly is a senior lecturer at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, and co-director of the Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change.
Allison Crimmins is a communications officer with the Joint Program.
Mechanical Engineering. Jan 2011, 133(01): 24-29 (6 pages)
Published Online: January 1, 2011
Citation
Reilly, J., and Crimmins, A. (January 1, 2011). "Myth v. Fact." ASME. Mechanical Engineering. January 2011; 133(01): 24–29. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2011-JAN-1
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