Call for Paper: ICERME-2021 : ONLINE International Conference on Emerging Renewable and Modern Energy (original) (raw)
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Abstracts of 1st Online Energy Symposium of South Asia Dec. 2013
Online Energy Symposium of South Asia Dec. 2013, 2014
The symposium was organized with a number of objectives related to the energy and energy security in South Asia with special reference to Sri Lanka. As objectives, a forum was created to share knowledge about energy security related issues, experiences and best practices in South Asia among national and international scholars, researchers, and practitioners. Additionally a dialog was initiated on the use of ICTs and Digital technologies as cost effective ways of collaborations among international professional networks. A Total of thirteen expert participants from Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Germany, U.K and Norway presented their findings in a panel specialized on Sri Lankan Energy Security.
Redefined Energy Ecosystem for People and Planet-The Indian Perspective
PPAC Journal, 2024
The global growth in the share of clean energy consumption has steadily risen with 8.8 % CAGR post the 2015 Paris Agreement for Climate Change, manifesting collective commitments from advanced and developing nations to contribute their part towards achieving 2030 SDG targets. Further, with the intensifying debate on Climate Change, the advanced countries have proclaimed to achieve "Net Zero" carbon emissions by 2050, while India has set its target for 2070 by adopting the "Panchanmrit" and the concept of the mass movement for " LiFE." The government has fixed intermittent milestones to achieve the target, suiting local conditions and people's choices, underpinning decarbonized economic growth with the urgency to eradicate energy poverty for improved life and well-being. The aspirations are to diversify the country's primary energy consumption mix with ease of energy access at affordable prices, security and independence of supplies, enhanced sustainability, and socioeconomic growth. As a result, India's energy landscape is set to change fast due to the introducing of new policy reforms that promote frugal innovation, deployment of advanced technologies, and indigenization to diversify the energy ecosystem with structural changes to incentivize investments. The government has carved out a multipronged approach to diversify its energy sources to slowly phase out fossil fuels, promoting Green Hydrogen, Renewables, and biofuels like renewable methane (Biogas), Ethanol, and biodiesel. The intentions are manifested by forming the Global Biofuel Alliance and the Solar Alliance, where India aspires to be a global leader. The rollout of several new policy guidelines encourages the production and consumption of these new energy resources with ease of business in a competitive market. This exploratory study aims to present the recent developments involving policy reforms, technological advancement, plans, and status for accelerating the energy transition in India to keep up with its voluntary commitments. This finding has implications for the Indian Energy Sector and associated stakeholders to advance the operationalization of India's aspirations towards Net Zero for decarbonized economic growth.
INDIA’S ENERGY SCENARIO - CURRENT AND FUTURE
The current population of India is 1.28 billion people accounting for more than 17.5% of world’s population. Out of which, 32% is urban and rest is rural. It faces a formidable challenge in providing adequate energy supplies to users at a reasonable cost. India’s energy challenge is of fundamental importance. In the last six decades, India’s energy use has increased 16 times and the installed electricity capacity by 84 times. Overall generation in the country has been increased from 967.150 BU during 2013-14 to 1048.673 BU during the year 2014-15. In 2008, India’s energy use was the fifth highest in the world. Nevertheless, India as a country suffers from significant energy poverty and pervasive electricity deficits. In recent years, India’s energy consumption has been increasing at a relatively fast rate due to population growth and economic development, even though the base rate may be somewhat low. With an economy projected to grow at 8-9% per annum, rapid urbanization and improving standards of living for millions of Indian households, the demand is likely to grow significantly. The broad vision behind India’s integrated energy policy is to reliably meet the demand for energy services of all sectors including the lifeline energy needs of vulnerable households in all parts of the country with safe, clean and convenient energy at the least-cost. This must be done in a technically efficient, economically viable and environmentally sustainable manner using different fuels and forms of energy, conventional and non-conventional, as well as new and emerging energy sources to ensure supply at all times with a prescribed confidence. However, in the long run if we take the effect of the pollutants due to enormous use of fuels for power generation on human health and environment and cost as well as efforts needed to improve or alter the path of degradation, the initial higher cost of using renewable resources for producing energy may not be too big. A high degree of caution is also needed as emerging economies like India may not at present have financial resources to leapfrog directly to cleaner mechanisms of energy. Since global warming is an international M.R. Kolhe and Dr. P.G. Khot http://www.iaeme.com/ijm.asp 48 editor@iaeme.com phenomenon and it has no boundaries there is an urgent need for the transfer of technology and development of appropriate financial instruments from developed the world to nations who are still trying to find their rightful places. In this paper the various sources for power generation have been discussed with their part in total energy scenario of India and the appropriate energy mix for future so as to balance between satisfying the growing energy demand and their after effects.
Energy Review, 2021
Inside this Issue Climate Change and Coastal Development: A Case of Sunderbans, India Mayilvaganan M. City Gas Distribution: An Overview of Activities in India Atul Rawat The Energy Dilemma for Pakistan in CPEC Monika Kumari
2021
One of the important essentials of modern living is energy without which modern world cannot survive and therefore depends deeply on energy usages and energy abusage. What is important to be seen is that more than 7.8 billion people on this planet are burning fossil fuels for their daily needs. Therefore, the challenge for the 21st century is how to conserve this ‘good’ energy and how to reduce its transformation into ‘bad’ energy and at the same time enjoy a sustainable lifestyle through modern inventions of science and technology. The problems facing University of Central Punjab, Lahore (UCP) is on the one hand how to minimise the usage of energy resources and secondly, how to move away from using fosil feuls and toward usage of eco-friendly energy sources for achieving sustainability and abiding by the Goal 7 of the SDG (Affordable and Clean Energy). Keeping sustainable development and energy conservation issues in mind, UCP has already in collaboration with M/S Premier Energy em...