Energy Conservation Indicators II

Morovic, Tihomir.

Energy Conservation Indicators II [electronic resource] / A report prepared for the Directorate-General Science, Research and Development, and Directorate-General Energy Commission of the European Communities by Tihomir Morovic, Geert Gerritse, Gerhard Jaeckel, Eberhard Jochem, Wilhelm Mannsbart, Helmut Poppke, Barbara Witt. - 1st ed. 1989. - X, 329 p. 2 illus. online resource.

0. Introduction -- I EUR-12 -- 1. Summary and Conclusions -- 2. Aggregate Indicators and Findings -- 3. Residential Indicators -- 4. Indicators for the Agricultural/Commercial/Public Sector -- 5. Industrial Indicators -- 6. Transportation Indicators -- 7. Indicators for the Transformation Sector, Distribution Losses and Foreign Trade in Derived Energy Products -- II Member States -- 1. Residential Indicators of the Member States -- 2. Indicators for the Agricultural/Commercial/Public Sector of the Member States -- 3. Industrial Indicators of the Member States -- 4. Transportation Indicators of the Member States -- 5. Indicators for the Transformation Sector, Distribution Losses and Foreign Trade in Derived Energy Products in the Member States -- 6. Data Sources and Literature.

Energy Conservation Indicators is a methodology to break down energy consumption data into their component parts in the same way as those which are due to annual weather fluctuations, business cycle, structural changes in the economy and higher energy efficiency. This methodology is applied for the first time to all twelve Member Countries of the European Communities for the period 1979 to 1985. It represents a tool for a long-term monitoring of the efforts towards the goal set by the Council of Ministers of the European Community to achieve a 20% improvement in intensity of final energy demand between 1985 and 1995. In addition, it is used by the Commission of the European Communities for considerations regarding energy conservation policies for the Community. The results of the analysis performed showed that the goal set by the Council cannot be reached if the current trends prevail in the years to come. The reasons are the declining impact of structural changes towards less energy-intensive production and the increasing level of energy-consuming comfort in the residential and private transportation sectors.

9783642748400

10.1007/978-3-642-74840-0 doi


Energy policy.
Energy and state.
Environmental economics.
Energy Policy, Economics and Management.
Environmental Economics.

HD9502-9502.5

333.79 338.926

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