By Karen Ward, Zoe Knight, Nick Robins, Paul Spedding and Charanjit Singh
Anyone who drives a car, heats a home, or runs a factory has every reason to be concerned
about the strains on global energy resources in the next four decades.
Either the world...
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By Karen Ward, Zoe Knight, Nick Robins, Paul Spedding and Charanjit Singh
Anyone who drives a car, heats a home, or runs a factory has every reason to be concerned
about the strains on global energy resources in the next four decades.
Either the world is going
to deplete its supplies at an unacceptably fast rate – and overheat the planet in doing so – or it
is going to have to make massive investments in energy efficiency, renewables and carbon
capture.
As things stand, the world simply doesn’t have the luxury of turning its back on
nuclear power, despite the recent disaster in Japan
We follow up our World in 2050 report by arguing that the rise of emerging markets will impose
new strains on energy supply.
We conclude the world can grow and without excessive
environmental damage – but it will need a change in human behaviour and massive collective
government foresight
Disclosures and Disclaimer This report must be read with the disclosures and analyst
certifications i
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