2°Celsius
Natural gas is the ideal bridge fuel to support the global energy transition, or so the story goes. But what about methane emissions? Environmentalists want us to throw it on the pile of the other fossil fuels and doom it to the past. The energy community says: Not so fast. Where are we on our energy transition journey when it comes to natural gas and if we’re going to invest in it going forward, what are the implications of the methane problem for our chosen direction to a renewable future? Contributors: Raul Cazan, Founder of The 2Celsius Association, Bucharest, Romania Kim O’Dowd, Campaigner at The Environmental Investigation Agency, London, UK Dr Roland Kupers, Global Advisor to the United Nations Environment Programme’s International Methane Emissions Observatory, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Deborah Gordon, Senior Fellow, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, Brown University; Senior Principal at the Rocky Mountain Institute’s (RMI) Climate Intelligence Program, Washington DC, USA Dr Philippe Ciais, Associate Director, Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL), Paris, France Théophile Humann-Guilleminot, Campaign Manager, Clean Air Task Force ,Athens Greece Dr Dave Lowry, Reader: Stable Isotope and Greenhouse Gas, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Royal Holloway, London UK Dr Rebecca Fisher: Reader: Atmospheric Methane, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Royal Holloway, London UK Dr Thoman Roeckmann, Professor of Atmospheric Physics and Chemistry, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Professor Jonathan Stern, Distinguished Research Fellow, The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, Oxford, UK Melanie Kenderdine, Principal, Energy Futures Initiative, Washington DC, USA
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