The Paris Agreement, the shale revolution in North America, and the fall in the cost of renewable power have changed the geopolitical context of UK’s low carbon energy transition.
This theme explores the global geopolitical consequences of energy system transformation, while also looking at the political implications of Brexit and beyond for the UK’s net-zero energy and climate strategy and it changing place in the world.
UKERC Director Rob Gross gave evidence last week on the UK’s future energy technology mix to The...
This article, originally published by The Academy of Social Sciences, argues that the UK's offshore...
The International Energy Agency has recently highlighted the challenges of "energy security,...
The Netherlands and the UK are embarking on heat transitions from similar starting points, with a heavy dependence on natural gas. This article explores how their governance approaches differ, through the development of a comparative institutionalist framework.
The ongoing Global Energy System Transformation (GEST) has attracted the attention of multiple academic disciplines and practitioners, approaching the process with different analytical and conceptual tools.
As demand for electrical energy storage scales, production networks for lithium-ion battery manufacturing are being re-worked organisationally and geographically.