4.8 Article

The dynamics of global public research funding on climate change, energy, transport, and industrial decarbonisation

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 162, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2022.112420

Keywords

Public research funding; Climate change adaptation; Energy transitions; Technology innovation; Carbon emission; Interdisciplinary

Funding

  1. Industrial Decarbonisation Research and Innovation Centre (IDRIC) in the United Kingdom - UKRI and EPSRC [EP/V027050/1]
  2. Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) , Nigeria [POSS7924897311]

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This paper explores the funding trends, topical themes, and notable gaps in global public research funding across energy, climate change, transport, and industrial decarbonisation from 1990 to 2020. It finds that energy and climate research funding is concentrated within the European Commission, United Kingdom, and United States, with climate change adaptation research being the most funded area. The paper also highlights the diversity in funded disciplines, with social sciences receiving significant support alongside engineering and physical sciences.
This paper explores the funding trends, topical themes, and notable gaps in global public research funding across the areas of energy, climate change, transport, and industrial decarbonisation from 1990 to 2020. The paper organizes its analysis along the themes of financial and spatial patterns of funding, patterns of disciplinary funding, and the temporality (and shifting research priorities) within funding patterns. It finds that funding for energy and climate research remains concentrated within the European Commission, United Kingdom and United States. Climate change adaptation research is the most funded general area, and the specific topics of energy efficiency, climate resilience, and climate information systems, managing climate risks, energy storage, carbon dioxide removal and solar energy are the most funded technologies. There is significant diversity in the disciplines funded, with the social sciences supported almost as much as the engineering and physical sciences and meaningful amounts of funding disbursed to the arts and humanities and the life sciences. A large majority of projects identify themselves as transdisciplinary. The paper, lastly, discusses research gaps and future research questions.

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