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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy Resources and Conversion Technologies for the 21st Century

TLDR
In this article, the authors reviewed the reserves of fossil fuels and the prospects for nuclear power and the renewables, and reviewed the main energy conversion technologies that are available now or are expected to become increasingly available through time.
Abstract
A variety of energy sources will compete to provide the energy services that humans will require over the next 100 years. The balance of these sources will depend upon the availability of fossil fuels and the development of new technologies including renewable energy technologies, and will be one of the keys in projecting greenhouse gas emissions. There is uncertainty about each of the energy sources. With oil, for example, there are two alternate views of future reserves, one that reserves are geologically limited and that supplies will decline within a decade or two, the other that there are enormous quantities of hydrocarbon in the earth’s crust and that reserves are a function of developing technology and price. With solar voltaics, as a second example, there is optimism that the technology will become increasingly competitive, but there is uncertainty about the rate at which costs can come down and about ultimate cost levels. This paper reviews the reserves of fossil fuels and the prospects for nuclear power and the renewables. It also reviews the main energy conversion technologies that are available now or are expected to become increasingly available through time. However, it should be noted that, over a time horizon of 100 years, there may be quite radical changes in both production and conversion technologies that cannot be predicted and it is quite possible for some as yet unheard of technology to be developed and to transform the markets. The paper has been written to aid the development of new scenarios for the emission of greenhouse gases for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Depletion of fossil fuels and anthropogenic climate change—A review

TL;DR: This article reviewed the connection between these two issues and concluded that limits to availability of fossil fuels will set a limit for mankind's ability to affect the climate, however, this limit is unclear as various studies have reached quite different conclusions regarding future atmospheric CO2 concentrations caused by fossil fuel limitations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon emission and mitigation cost comparisons between fossil fuel, nuclear and renewable energy resources for electricity generation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the electricity generation costs of a number of current commercial technologies with technologies expected to become commercially available within the coming decade or so, and the amount of greenhouse gas emissions resulting per kWh of electricity generated.
Journal ArticleDOI

THE POTENTIAL OF BIOMASS FUELS IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE: Focus on Transportation Fuels

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that unless these efficiencies are substantially improved, the displacement of CO2 emissions from transportation fuels in the United States is unlikely to reach 10% using domestic biofu...
Journal ArticleDOI

Constraints of fossil fuels depletion on global warming projections

TL;DR: In this article, new projections of atmospheric CO2 concentration and global-mean temperature change are presented, should fossil fuels be exploited at a rate limited by geological availability only, and an upper bound, a lower bound and an ensemble mean profile for fossil CO2 emissions until 2200 are derived.
Journal ArticleDOI

Representing induced technological change in models for climate policy analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, an overview reconciles the divergent views of technology and technological change within different types of models, elucidates the theoretical underpinnings of ITC, introduces the reader to the techniques of their practical implementation, and evaluates the implications for models' results.
References
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Book

Fuel Cell Handbook

Journal ArticleDOI

An assessment of world hydrocarbon resources

TL;DR: In this article, a regional breakdown for 11 world regions indicates that neither hydrocarbon resource availability nor costs are likely to become forces that automatically would help wean the global energy system from the use of fossil fuel during the next century.
Journal Article

Survey of energy resources

I. Gorst
- 01 Jan 1985 - 
Book

Annual statistical bulletin

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