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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of experience curve analyses for energy demand technologies

TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide a comprehensive review of experience curve analyses for energy demand technologies and find a widespread trend towards declining prices and costs at an average learning rate of 18 ± 9%.
About
This article is published in Technological Forecasting and Social Change.The article was published on 2010-03-01. It has received 194 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Experience curve effects & Energy supply.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of learning rates for electricity supply technologies

TL;DR: In this article, a literature review of the learning rates reported for 11 power generation technologies employing an array of fossil fuels, nuclear, and renewable energy sources is presented, including two-factor models relating cost to cumulative expenditures for research and development (R&D) as well as the cumulative installed capacity or electricity production.
Journal ArticleDOI

On-road Emissions of Light-duty Vehicles in Europe

TL;DR: The first comprehensive on-road emissions test of light-duty vehicles with state-of-the-art Portable Emission Measurement Systems finds that nitrogen oxides emissions of gasoline vehicles as well as carbon monoxide and total hydrocarbon emissions of both diesel and gasoline vehicles generally remain below the respective emission limits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy efficiency in the German pulp and paper industry – A model-based assessment of saving potentials

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess 17 process technologies to improve energy efficiency in the German pulp and paper industry up to 2035 using a techno-economic approach and find that the most influential technologies are heat recovery in paper mills and the use of innovative paper drying technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of uncertainties in technology experience curves

TL;DR: The use of log-linear experience curves (or learning curves) relating reductions in the unit cost of technologies to their cumulative production or installed capacity has become a common method of representing endogenous technical change in energy-economic models used for policy analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the electrification of road transport - Learning rates and price forecasts for hybrid-electric and battery-electric vehicles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors obtain insight into the prospects of future price decline by establishing ex-post learning rates for hybrid-electric vehicles (HEVs) and ex-ante price forecasts for HEVs and BEVs.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Economic Implications of Learning by Doing

TL;DR: It is by now incontrovertible that increases in per capita income cannot be explained simply by increases in the capital-labor ratio as mentioned in this paper, and that knowledge is growing in time.
Book

Organizational Learning: Creating, Retaining and Transferring Knowledge

Linda Argote
TL;DR: The results of research on factors explaining organizational learning curves and the persistence and transfer of productivity gains acquired through experience are described and integrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors affecting the cost of airplanes

TL;DR: The matter became of increasing interest and importance because of the program sponsored by the Bureau of Air Commerce for the development of a small two-place airplane which, it was hoped, could be marketed at $700 assuming a quantity of ten thousand units could be released for construction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning curves in manufacturing.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that organizations vary considerably in the rates at which they learn and that the reasons for the variation observed in organizational learning curves include organizational forgetting, employee turnover, transfer of knowledge from other products and other organizations, and economies of scale.
Posted Content

Learning Curves In Manufacturing

TL;DR: Organizations vary considerably in the rates at which they learn, and reasons for the variation observed in organizational learning curves include organizational "forgetting," employee turnover, transfer of knowledge from other products and other organizations, and economies of scale.