What are the positive and negative environmental impacts of increasing renewable energy production (wind, solar, geothermal, and so on) and other actions taken to decarbonise the economy?
Background
To limit future warming requires rapid reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and achieving net zero by 2050, as required by UK legislation. Climate mitigation is led in government by the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS). But Defra is responsible for efforts to reduce GHG emissions from four sectors: agriculture, waste and wastewater, land-use, and fluorinated gases (F-gases). Defra also has responsibility to promote forestry, which acts as a carbon sink. Together, the four Defra sectors represent 15% of the total net UK GHGs, with agriculture being the biggest contributor (about 10% of UK emissions).
Defra has research interests in reduction of emissions, the removal of GHG from the atmosphere, and in understanding the impacts of mitigation activities on other environmental outcomes.
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Source
This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:
Topics
Related UKRI funded projects
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A whole-system approach to analysing bioenergy demand and supply: mobilising the long-term potential of bioenergy TSEC-BIOSYS.
The project's objectives will be met through four strongly interdependent inter-disciplinary research themes (Figure 1). The themes will bring together natural and social scientists, engineers and economists from fifteen...
Funded by: NERC
Why might this be relevant?
The project focuses on analyzing bioenergy demand, supply, and sustainability, which are key aspects of increasing renewable energy production and decarbonizing the economy.
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Measurement and Analysis of bioenergy greenhouse gases: Integrating GHGs into LCAs and the UK Biomass Value Chain Modelling Environment (MAGLUE)
To meet the 2020 renewable energy target the UK is going to need biomass, and lots of it. DECC has an aspiration for an additional 20-38TWh of biomass electricity by 2020 and this will require around 12-23 million dry to...
Funded by: EPSRC
Why might this be relevant?
The project addresses the environmental impacts of biomass for energy, which is a type of renewable energy production.
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EnergyScapes and Ecosystem Services
Renewable energy has recently received considerable media and public attention because of perceived benefits to the environment, including climate change, and the potential to replace imported sources of energy, the poss...
Funded by: NERC
Why might this be relevant?
The project aims to determine the impacts of land-based renewables on ecosystem services, which is relevant to understanding the environmental impacts of renewable energy production.