GEA, 2012 : Global Energy Assessment - Toward a Sustainable Future
Publication date
2012
Authors
Johansson, T.B.
Patwardhan, A.
Nakicenovic, N.
Gomez-Echeverri, L.
Turkenburg, W.C.
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Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Book
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Abstract
Energy is central to addressing major challenges of the 21st Century, challenges like climate change, economic and
social development, human well-being, sustainable development, and global security. In 2005, Prof. Bert Bolin, the
founding Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), with other eminent scientists and
policy-makers, identified that a comprehensive, science-based assessment of the global energy system was needed if
these challenges were to be realistically addressed. The Global Energy Assessment (GEA) is the result of this shared
vision.
Since the establishment of the GEA in 2006 by governing Council of the International Institute for Applied Systems
Analysis (IIASA), 500 independent experts (about 300 authors and 200 anonymous reviewers) from academia, business,
government, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations from all the regions of the world have contributed
to GEA in a process similar to that adopted by the IPCC.
The final GEA report examines: (a) the major global challenges and their linkages to energy; (b) the technologies and
resources available for providing adequate, modern and affordable forms of energy; (c) the plausible structure of future
energy systems most suited to addressing the century’s challenges; and (d) the policies and measures, institutions and
capacities needed to realize sustainable energy futures.