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Study Explores COVID-19 s Impact on the Energy System and Demand for Electricity

Study Explores COVID-19 s Impact on the Energy System and Demand for Electricity COVID-19 has not only caused a temporary drop in global CO 2 emissions, it has also reduced the share of power generated by burning coal - a trend that could in fact outlast the pandemic. This is the key result of a new study by a team of economists based in Potsdam and Berlin that looked at COVID-19 s impact on the energy system and demand for electricity. Their findings show that the pandemic, while putting a terrible toll on people s lives and the economy, has also opened a window of opportunity to make this current trend of decreasing coal use irreversible: Supported by the right climate policy measures, power sector emissions could decline more rapidly than previously thought.

Coal and COVID-19 - Sonnenseite - Ökologische Kommunikation mit Franz Alt

How the pandemic is accelerating the end of fossil power generation. COVID-19 has not only caused a temporary drop in global CO2 emissions, it has also reduced the share of power generated by burning coal – a trend that could in fact outlast the pandemic. This is the key result of a new study by a team of economists based in Potsdam and Berlin that looked at COVID-19’s impact on the energy system and demand for electricity. Their findings show that the pandemic, while putting a terrible toll on people’s lives and the economy, has also opened a window of opportunity to make this current trend of decreasing coal use irreversible: Supported by the right climate policy measures, power sector emissions could decline more rapidly than previously thought.

Climate change has high cost - Global Times

WORLD / CROSS-BORDERS Study finds global warming linked to slowing economy By AFP Published: Feb 09, 2021 07:03 PM A man takes part in a climate change protest in Times Square in New York, the United States, on Sept. 20, 2020. (Xinhua/Wang Ying)Increasingly erratic weather caused by global warming threatens global economic growth, scientists warned Monday with a report showing that even short-lived climate volatility can have a significant impact.  Climate change caused by the burning of fossil fuels is causing planet-wide temperature rises that have intensified deadly droughts, heat waves, floods and super storms.  But researchers from Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Columbia University and the Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change said impact studies often look at annual averages, rather than the effects of day-to-day temperature fluctuations.   

Coal and COVID-19: How the pandemic is accelerating the end of fossil power generation

Coal and COVID-19: How the pandemic is accelerating the end of fossil power generation Newswise COVID-19 has not only caused a temporary drop in global CO2 emissions, it has also reduced the share of power generated by burning coal - a trend that could in fact outlast the pandemic. This is the key result of a new study by a team of economists based in Potsdam and Berlin that looked at COVID-19 s impact on the energy system and demand for electricity. Their findings show that the pandemic, while putting a terrible toll on people s lives and the economy, has also opened a window of opportunity to make this current trend of decreasing coal use irreversible: Supported by the right climate policy measures, power sector emissions could decline more rapidly than previously thought.

Weniger Kohle wegen COVID-19 - Sonnenseite - Ökologische Kommunikation mit Franz Alt

Weniger Kohle wegen COVID-19 - Sonnenseite - Ökologische Kommunikation mit Franz Alt
sonnenseite.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sonnenseite.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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