Solving the coal puzzle

Lessons from four years of coal phase-out policy in Europe

Playing With Fire

An assessment of company plans to burn biomass in EU coal power stations

The A-B-C of BCAs

An overview of the issues around introducing Border Carbon Adjustments in the EU

Coal mine methane leaks are worse for climate change than all shipping and aviation

New IEA World Energy Outlook shows coal mine methane leaks add up to a third to emissions from coal

Coal Free Kingdom

UK election manifestos should commit to take the UK fully coal-free, including in industry, finance, and domestic heating – ready for next year’s COP26 in Glasgow

The cash cow has stopped giving: Are Germany’s lignite plants now worthless?

Our new research finds German lignite gross profits collapsed 54% so far in 2019. With lignite now loss-making, the case for Gov. compensation has collapsed

A closer look at voluntary carbon action

Cutting carbon now occupies a prominent place in discussions about ethical living and corporate responsibility. In this document we explore how the popular metaphor of “carbon footprints” can lead us astray by emphasising personal action at the expense of public action and by importing politically contentious ideas about how global carbon resources should be apportioned. We also explore how a failure to account for the implications of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) has led commentators to make misleading recommendations about the value of renewable tariffs or reduced electricity consumption in combating climate change. As electricity emissions are controlled under the ETS, these measures do not reduce the overall amount of CO2 entering the atmosphere unless a corresponding quantity of ETS carbon permits are bought and destroyed.

Skills

Posted on

April 4, 2010