에너지경제연구원 전자도서관

로그인

에너지경제연구원 전자도서관

자료검색

  1. 메인
  2. 자료검색
  3. 통합검색

통합검색

보고서

Energy Policies of IEA Countries: Sweden 2013 Review

저자
IEA
단체저자
IEA
발행사항
Paris OECD/IEA 2013
형태사항
175 p. graph 27cm
책 소개

Sweden has made progress in recent years towards a more secure, sustainable energy future. The Scandinavian nation already has an almost carbon-free electricity supply and has phased out oil use in residential and power sectors. It is increasingly integrated within the Nordic and Baltic electricity markets, and its joint renewable electricity certificate market with Norway offers a unique model for other countries.

Now Sweden must take concrete steps to realise its vision of a fossil-fuel-independent vehicle fleet by 2030 and no net greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050. Although Sweden has decided to allow the replacement of its existing nuclear reactors, further emission reductions will come at a higher cost and require technology change. This means Sweden will need to carefully evaluate the most cost-effective pathways for its transition to a low-carbon economy.

Sweden has a high energy-intensity level, which requires greater energy efficiency in industry, buildings, heat and transport.? A decarbonisation vision should be mapped out for each industry sector. Starting with transport, Sweden must specify how it will wean its vehicle fleet from fossil fuels by 2030.

Swedens industry lead in smart grids is an asset. Sweden should scale up investment in clean energy technologies. As all Nordic countries decarbonise, cost-effective regional solutions can control consumers costs. The large-scale deployment of renewable and energy technologies in a common Northern European energy market can drive decarbonisation without comprising competitiveness, security of supply and affordability.

This review analyses the energy-policy challenges currently facing Sweden, and provides studies and recommendations for each sector.?

목차
1. Executive summary and key recommendations Part I. Policy Analysis 2. The Framwork: Energy Policy and Climate Change 3. Energy Efficiency Part II. Sector Analysis 4. Fossil Fuels and Peat 5. Renewable Energy 6. Nuclear Energy 7. Electricity 8. District Heating Part III. Energy Technology 9. Energy Technology Research, Development, Demonstration & Deployment Part IV. Annexes