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CAPITAL EQUIPMENT

CONSTRUCTION WORLD

Capital Equipment

Capital Equipment News is dedicated to the application of equipment and modes of transport that are used in the mining, construction, quarrying, and transport industries.

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Construction World

Construction World was first published in 1982 and has grown to become a leader in its field, offering a unique mix of editorial coverage to satisfy the diverse needs of its readers.

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ELECTRICITY + CONTROL

MECHCHEM AFRICA

Electricity + Control

E + C publishes innovative, technical articles that provide solutions to engineering challenges in measurement, automation, control, and energy management.

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MechChem Africa

MechChem Africa supports African engineering and technical managers across the full spectrum of chemical and mechanical disciplines.

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MODERN MINING

SPARKS ELECTRICAL NEWS

Modern Mining

Established in 2005, Modern Mining is one of SA's leading monthly mining magazines, noted for the quality and accuracy of its writing and the breadth of its coverage.

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Sparks Electrical News

Readable and informative, Sparks Electrical News is the newspaper for those involved in installing and maintaining electrical supplies and equipment.

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AFRICAN FUSION

MODERN QUARRYING

African Fusion

African Fusion (AF), the official journal of the Southern African Institute of Welding, provides up-to-date insight into welding and NDT technology and metal fabrication industries across Africa.

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Modern Quarrying

Modern Quarrying is read by quarry operators, recyclers and members of the extractive industries for aggregate. The magazine is targeted  to the needs of key decision-makers who purchase and specify quarrying plant and equipment.

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Two new studies published by Carol Olson and Frank Lenzmann in MRS Energy and Sustainability – A Review Journal (MRS E&S) shed light on the true economic, social and environmental impacts of photovoltaics as compared to those of the fossil fuel supply chain. Olson and Lenzmann, who work at the Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands, compared the economics associated with all the major fuel supply chains, including oil and gas, coal and nuclear.

They conclude that the current system is weighted heavily in favour of fossil and nuclear fuels at the expense of more sustainable energy sources revealing that support for renewable energy sources is dwarfed in magnitude as well as in duration in comparison to the subsidies shoring up fossil and nuclear fuels.

The authors’ timely analysis of the historical and current fossil fuel supply chain provides a useful perspective that challenges what they refer to as ‘limited frames of reference when addressing the consequences of business-as-usual operation of fossil fuel supply chains.’ Their extensive commentary looks at the complete subsidy chain both for production and consumption of fossil and nuclear fuels so that it is now possible, for the first time, to compare all the energy options fairly, revealing costs that have historically been hidden along the supply chain.

‘The entanglement of the fossil fuel supply industry, banks, commodity traders, and the financialisation of commodities currently allows fossil fuel supply transactions to be made in non-competitive ways,’ they write.

‘The immense capital available to those operating the fossil fuel supply chain affords not only economic advantages, but also allows them to side-step regulation.’

In a context where there is broad consensus in the scientific community that fossil fuels are largely responsible for global warming – with 85% of CO2 emissions coming from fossil fuel combustion – the authors argue that there needs to be a fundamental redesign of the energy market to make it fit for purpose.

‘The electricity market, which is unnecessarily complex, is fundamentally only suited for a small club of fuel-conversion electricity providers,’ they write, ‘not for the large number of providers, the public engagement, or the renewable electricity generation required in the 21st century.’

They argue that the price tag of failing to address this issue is too high to ignore: ‘While [it is] a starting point, an incremental approach is not sufficient to address the systemic changes required to decarbonise the electricity supply in line with the recent Paris Agreement,’ a deal signed by all 196 of the world’s countries to pursue efforts to keep global warming below 1,5°C.

‘The ‘true cost’ of electricity generation, including the environmental impacts, must be kept in sight,’ Olson and Lenzmann write.

Consumers are currently over-paying for fossil fuel infrastructure through a large variety of subsidies even though fossil fuel electricity prices are often kept artificially low. The cost savings of renewable energy generation for consumers, especially with wind and photovoltaics, is extremely competitive especially with a level comparison. When consumers steer decisions themselves, as evidenced in many regional and community-based actions, they more and more frequently choose for renewable wind and photovoltaics not only because of the economic benefits, but also because of the resilience these electricity generation technologies bring to the energy supply. Policy makers should find ways to address the imbalance of subsidised infrastructure, including the energy market, which gives advantages to the fossil fuel supply chain, and which may obscure the economic advantages of renewable energy technologies, such as photovoltaics.

The contents of this press release refer to two articles by Carol Olson and Frank Lenzmann in MRS Energy and Sustainability, which are linked below.

Bringing the social costs and benefits of electric energy from photovoltaics versus fossil fuels to light

The social and economic consequences of the fossil fuel supply chain

Enquiries:

Jo Rennie. Email jrennie@cambridge.org

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