October 7, 2021

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Report shows energy demand must be slashed to hit climate targets

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Demand for energy in the UK must be significantly reduced if net zero targets are to be met, emissions reductions will not be enough, according to a report today from CREDS, the government-funded Centre for Research into Energy Demand Solutions, led by Professor Nick Eyre, Oxford Professor of Energy and Climate Policy.

CREDS Director, Professor Eyre says, "This report adds to the being assembled by the Oxford-led CREDS research team on the importance of energy use in achieving net zero. We have already shown that improvements in have delivered more carbon emissions reduction than anything else, and that further massive efficiency improvements are possible globally. With this report we set out a detailed analysis of how the UK can halve its energy use by 2050."

According to the report, "Without reduction we will not achieve the UK's emissions reduction target of 78% below 1990 levels, or our 2050 net-zero target."

But it goes on to set out how it would be possible for the UK to halve energy demand - with measures aimed at cutting usage across areas including transport, food and home heating.

The CREDS' team includes 140 people from 24 universities, including nine Oxford researchers.  In addition to Professor Eyre, Professor Tim Schwanen and Dr Christian Brand, from the Transport Studies Unit, are advising on transport and mobility, while Dr Tina Fawcett, from the university's Environmental Change Institute, heads the policy and governance team (see full list below).

CREDS has modeled four possible scenarios for energy:

Under scenarios three and four, there would be a radical shake-up to daily life, although the report says, "None of our Low Energy Demand (LED) scenarios compromise our quality of life."

Mobility: The report points out three quarters of energy use comes from and 24% from air transport. Its LED recommendations include:

Nutrition: 11% of the UK's greenhouse gas emissions are attributable to agriculture and land use. CREDS recommends:

Heat in domestic buildings:  This accounts for 15.2% of total national greenhouse gas emissions in 2020, a share which has been increasing steadily since the 1990s. Under CREDS' two active scenarios, the report envisages a range of moves, including:

According to the report, by adopting the most radical measures, the UK could halve energy demand and by following scenario three, this could be reduced by 40%.

But, it says, "Energy efficiency improvements from , electric vehicles and home retrofit, for example, are not the only options to reduce energy demand. In fact, our scenario analysis shows that by implementing energy efficiency alone without considering broader shifts in consumption patterns and reduction in energy service demands, net-zero is very difficult to achieve."

CREDS's report concludes, "Without energy demand reduction we will not achieve the UK's emissions reduction target of 78% below 1990 levels, or our 2050 net-zero target. The UK Government has yet to define how energy demand will contribute to achieving our climate ambitions. Given the evidence presented in this report, it is imperative that the UK Government outline a detailed strategy and supporting policies to enable demand reduction to fulfill its necessary role in achieving rapid in the UK.

More information: Report: low-energy.creds.ac.uk/the-report/

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