4.7 Article

Energy transition scenarios: What policies, societal attitudes, and technology developments will realize the EU Green Deal?

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 239, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2021.122067

Keywords

Energy transition strategies; Review; Energy policy; Scenarios and storylines definition; Pathways comparison

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The European Green Deal aims to achieve 100% GHG reductions by 2050, relying on a combination of technological development, policy exertion, and societal attitudes. High electrification rates are crucial for rapid decarbonization, requiring a close coordination between technology development and policy enforcement. Insights from European energy transition scenarios are compared with other studies to identify similarities and draw consolidated findings relevant to the EU Green Deal.
The European Green Deal has been heralded as the Europe's man on the moon moment as it aims to achieve 100% GHG reductions by 2050. Achieving the decarbonization of the energy system will be driven by a combination of factors and synergies between technological development, policy exertion and societal attitudes. In this paper, we present an original set of future storylines until the year 2050 to inspire modelers, policy makers, industry actors, and the public to understand: Without technological developments in the next decades, to what extent can we rely on societal commitment or stronger cooperation within the EU to achieve climate targets? What technological innovations could become a cornerstone of an effective European energy transition? Through analyzing four pathways (shaped by the crossroads of policy-technology-society developments), results indicate that high electrification rates are imminent to achieve a rapid decarbonization. This implies that technology development and deployment must go hand-in-hand with strong policy enforcement in the short-term to speed-up the energy transition. Then, based on a review of European energy transition scenarios, these and other insights are compared vis-a-vis with other scenarios studies to identify similarities of pathway results and to elaborate on consolidated findings relevant to the EU Green Deal. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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