Urban Fuel Poverty
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Urban Fuel Poverty
- Author : Kristian Fabbri
- Publisher : Academic Press
- Release Date : 2019-07-04
- Total pages : 288
- ISBN : 9780128169537
- File Size : 34,9 Mb
- Total Download : 199
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Urban Fuel Poverty describes key approaches to defining and alleviating fuel poverty in cities using a multidisciplinary perspective and multiple case studies. It provides empirical knowledge on the levels and intensities of energy poverty in urban areas, along with new theoretical perspectives in conceptualizing the multidimensionality of energy poverty, with special focus given to the urban environment. Chapters discuss what energy poverty is in terms of taxonomy, stakeholders and affected parties, addressing the role of the economy and energy bills, the role of climate and city factors, the role of buildings, and the health and psychological impact on fuel poverty. The book addresses how to measure energy poverty, how to map it, and how to draw conclusions based on illness and social indicators. Finally, it explores measures to ‘fight’ fuel poverty, including policy and governance actions, building efficiency improvements and city planning. Bridges interdisciplinary divides between policy and economy, cities and buildings, and health and society Addresses the physical performance of urban fuel poverty and their effect on thermal comfort and human health Provides strategies and policies to mitigate energy and fuel poverty
Urban Energy Poverty and Positive Energy Districts
- Author : Siddharth Sareen,Caitlin Robinson,Harriet Thomson,Rigoberto García
- Publisher : Frontiers Media SA
- Release Date : 2022-02-15
- Total pages : 161
- ISBN : 9782889743520
- File Size : 50,8 Mb
- Total Download : 836
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PDF book entitled Urban Energy Poverty and Positive Energy Districts written by Siddharth Sareen,Caitlin Robinson,Harriet Thomson,Rigoberto García and published by Frontiers Media SA which was released on 2022-02-15 with total hardcover pages 161, the book become popular and critical acclaim.
Poverty in Scotland
- Author : Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Scottish Affairs Committee
- Publisher : The Stationery Office
- Release Date : 2007-12-20
- Total pages : 396
- ISBN : 0215037812
- File Size : 30,8 Mb
- Total Download : 527
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Incorporating HC 168-i to x, session 2006-07
Urban Energy Transition
- Author : Peter Droege
- Publisher : Elsevier
- Release Date : 2011-09-06
- Total pages : 664
- ISBN : 0080560466
- File Size : 41,6 Mb
- Total Download : 133
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This compendium of 29 chapters from 18 countries contains both fundamental and advanced insight into the inevitable shift from cities dominated by the fossil-fuel systems of the industrial age to a renewable-energy based urban development framework. The cross-disciplinary handbook covers a range of diverse yet relevant topics, including: carbon emissions policy and practice; the role of embodied energy; urban thermal performance planning; building efficiency services; energy poverty alleviation efforts; renewable community support networks; aspects of household level bio-fuel markets; urban renewable energy legislation, programs and incentives; innovations in individual transport systems; global urban mobility trends; implications of intelligent energy networks and distributed energy supply and storage; and the case for new regional monetary systems and lifestyles. Presented are practical and principled aspects of technology, economics, design, culture and society, presenting perspectives that are both local and international in scope and relevance.
Urban Heat Stress and Mitigation Solutions
- Author : Vincenzo Costanzo,Gianpiero Evola,Luigi Marletta
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2021-09-09
- Total pages : 430
- ISBN : 9781000431520
- File Size : 27,6 Mb
- Total Download : 706
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This book provides the reader with an understanding of the impact that different morphologies, construction materials and green coverage solutions have on the urban microclimate, thus affecting the comfort conditions of urban inhabitants and the energy needs of buildings in urban areas. The book covers the latest approaches to energy and outdoor comfort measurement and modelling on an urban scale, and describes possible measures and strategies to mitigate the effects of the mutual interaction between urban settlements and local microclimate. Despite its relevance, only limited literature is currently devoted to appraising—from an engineering perspective—the intertwining relationships between urban geometry and fabrics, energy fluxes between buildings and their surroundings, outdoor microclimate conditions and building energy demands in urban areas. This book fills this gap by first discussing the physical processes that govern heat and mass transfer at an urban scale, while emphasizing the role played by different spatial arrangements, manmade materials and green infrastructures on the outdoor microclimate. The first chapters also address the implications of these factors on the outdoor comfort conditions experienced by pedestrians, and on the buildings’ energy demand for space heating and cooling. Then, based upon cutting-edge experimental activities and simulation work, this book demonstrates current and forthcoming adaptation and mitigation strategies to improve the urban microclimate and its impact on the built environment, such as cool materials, thermochromic and retroreflective finishing materials, and green infrastructures applied either at a building scale or at the urban scale. The effect of these solutions is demonstrated for different cities worldwide under a range of climate conditions. Finally, the book opens a wider perspective by introducing the basic elements that allow fuel poverty, raw materials consumption, and the principles of circular economy in the definition of a resilient urban settlement.
Sustainable Urban Energy Policy
- Author : David Hawkey,Janette Webb,Heather Lovell,David McCrone,Margaret Tingey,Mark Winskel
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2015-12-14
- Total pages : 262
- ISBN : 9781317577072
- File Size : 40,7 Mb
- Total Download : 597
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Minimising the most severe risks of climate change means ending societal dependence on fossil fuels, and radically improving the efficiency with which we use all energy sources. Such deliberate transformative change is, however, without precedent. Sustainable Urban Energy Policy debates the major public issue of developing a sustainable, clean and affordable energy system by adopting a distinctive focus on heating in cities. In this way, the book constructs an original account of clean energy policy, politics and provision, grounded in new empirical data derived from case studies of urban and multi-level governance of sustainable heat and energy saving in the UK and Europe. Offering an original conceptual framework, this study builds on socio-technical studies, economic and urban sociology, human geography, applied economics and policy studies in order to understand energy governance and systemic change in energy provisions. This book is a valuable resource for students and academics in the areas of Science and Technology Studies, Sociology, Geography (Urban Studies) and Political Economy as well as energy policy makers, social housing providers and energy practitioners.
Energy Efficiency and Fuel Poverty
- Author : Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee
- Publisher : The Stationery Office
- Release Date : 2008-11-06
- Total pages : 152
- ISBN : 0215524446
- File Size : 46,8 Mb
- Total Download : 498
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The Committee decided to examine the UK Energy Efficiency Action Plan with particular reference to Defra's efforts to improve households' energy efficiency and its statutory duty under the Warm Homes and Energy Conservation Act 2008 to ensure that people in England do not live in fuel poverty after November 2016. The Committee had received many responses to its call for evidence, but on 3 October 2008 the Prime Minister announced the creation of a new Government department, the Department of Energy and Climate Change. The responsibility for fuel poverty was passed from Defra to the new Department. The Committee decided not to proceed with its inquiry, but has decided to publish the written evidence it received on this subject. The Committee recommends that the new select committee set up to examine the expenditure, policy and administration of the new Department of Energy and Climate Change seriously consider holding an inquiry into fuel poverty at the earliest opportunity.
Fuel Poverty
- Author : Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Energy and Climate Change Committee
- Publisher : The Stationery Office
- Release Date : 2010-04-08
- Total pages : 228
- ISBN : 0215553926
- File Size : 17,9 Mb
- Total Download : 145
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Fuel Poverty : Fifth report of session 2009-10, Vol. 2: Oral and written Evidence
Urban Energy Landscapes
- Author : Vanesa Castán Broto
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press
- Release Date : 2019-04-11
- Total pages : 255
- ISBN : 9781108419420
- File Size : 43,7 Mb
- Total Download : 955
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Research volume on urban energy transition that will have wide interdisciplinary appeal to researchers in energy, urban and environmental studies.
Energy Poverty and Vulnerability
- Author : Neil Simcock,Harriet Thomson,Saska Petrova,Stefan Bouzarovski
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2017-09-07
- Total pages : 264
- ISBN : 9781351865289
- File Size : 16,7 Mb
- Total Download : 194
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Human health and well being are closely intertwined with the ability to access affordable and modern domestic energy services, including heating, cooling, lighting, cooking, and information technology. Energy poverty is said to occur when such amenities cannot be secured up to a socially- and physically- necessitated level. Millions of people across the world suffer from energy poverty due to a combination of financial, social and technical circumstances. Energy Poverty and Vulnerability provides novel and critical perspectives on the drivers and consequences of energy-related injustices in the home. Drawing together original research conducted by leading experts, the book offers fresh and innovative insights into the ways in which hitherto unexplored factors such as cultural norms, environmental conditions and household needs combine to shape vulnerability to energy poverty. Case studies from a wide range of countries are presented, thus providing the first globally-integrated account of a policy and research domain that has previously been divided between the Global South and North. An examination of the diverse manifestations of energy poverty is supplemented by an identification of this condition’s shared and context-specific causes. Conveying policy-relevant insights that can inform decision-making, this book can be of great interest to students and scholars of energy demand, social justice, and sustainability transitions, as well as decision-makers and practitioners who wish to find out more about this complex issue.
Energy Poverty
- Author : Stefan Bouzarovski
- Publisher : Springer
- Release Date : 2017-12-22
- Total pages : 117
- ISBN : 9783319692999
- File Size : 34,6 Mb
- Total Download : 353
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This open access book aims to consolidate and advance debates on European and global energy poverty by exploring the political and infrastructural drivers and implications of the condition across a variety of spatial scales. It highlights the need for a geographical conceptualization of the different ways in which household-level energy deprivation both influences and is contingent upon disparities occurring at a wider range of spatial scales. There is a strong focus on the relationships among energy transformation, institutional change and place-based factors in determining the nature and location of energy-related injustices. The book also explores how patterns and structures of energy poverty have changed over time, as evidenced by some of the common measures used to describe the condition. In part, this means investigating the makeup of energy poor demographics across various social and spatial cleavages. More broadly, it also argues that energy sector reconfigurations are both reflected in and shaped by various domains of social and political organization, especially in terms of creating poverty-relevant outcomes.
Energy Poverty Alleviation
- Author : Carlos Rubio-Bellido,Jaime Solis-Guzman
- Publisher : Springer Nature
- Release Date : 2022-01-14
- Total pages : 284
- ISBN : 9783030910846
- File Size : 27,6 Mb
- Total Download : 656
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This book presents research on energy poverty alleviation, approaching the complex phenomenon topic holistically and with heterogeneity. It includes contributions from research teams studying the topic at a national, regional and local levels worldwide. The book is divided in two main blocks. The first part, New Approaches, involves novel assessments and concepts from a global and multidisciplinary point of view. The second part, Contexts, offers new theoretical diagnoses focused on case studies of different scales from around the world, and concepts for future trends. Energy Poverty Alleviation will be of interest to policy makers, stakeholders, academics and researchers with knowledge in the energy poverty field.
Minimizing Energy Consumption, Energy Poverty and Global and Local Climate Change in the Built Environment: Innovating to Zero
- Author : Matthaios Santamouris
- Publisher : Elsevier
- Release Date : 2018-10-15
- Total pages : 352
- ISBN : 9780128114186
- File Size : 19,8 Mb
- Total Download : 194
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Minimizing Energy Consumption, Energy Poverty and Global and Local Climate Change in the Built Environment: Innovating to Zero analyzes three major issues of the built environment, including the political, economic and technical contexts, the impacts of global and local climate change, and the technical and social characteristics of energy poverty. In addition, the book addresses the causes and reasons for the magnitude and characteristics of the built environment’s energy consumption. Users will find a fresh view of energy consumption in the built environment, especially in relation to energy poverty and climate change from the ZERO energy world perspective. Presents and analyzes over twenty specific linkages and causalities between energy consumption, climate change and energy poverty Describes the state-of-the-art regarding the energy consumption of buildings in Europe and recent trends and characteristics Explores how can we transform problems into opportunities Examines how we can increase the added value of technological, economic and social interventions to generate wealth and offer employment opportunities
Urban Retrofitting for Sustainability
- Author : Tim Dixon,Malcolm Eames,Miriam Hunt,Simon Lannon
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2014-01-21
- Total pages : 304
- ISBN : 9781317911937
- File Size : 55,6 Mb
- Total Download : 511
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With a foreword from Paul King, Chief Executive, UK Green Building Council and Chairman, Zero Carbon Hub As concerns over climate change and resource constraints grow, many cities across the world are trying to achieve a low carbon transition. Although new zero carbon buildings are an important part of the story, in existing cities the transformation of the current building stock and urban infrastructure must inevitably form the main focus for transitioning to a low carbon and sustainable future by 2050. Urban Retrofitting for Sustainability brings together interdisciplinary research contributions from leading international experts to focus on key issues such as systems innovation, financing tools, governance, energy, and water management. The chapters consider not only the knowledge and technical tools available, but looks forward to how they can be implemented in real cities by 2050.
Urban Sustainability Transitions
- Author : Niki Frantzeskaki,Vanesa Castán Broto,Lars Coenen,Derk Loorbach
- Publisher : Taylor & Francis
- Release Date : 2017-06-14
- Total pages : 403
- ISBN : 9781351855969
- File Size : 36,6 Mb
- Total Download : 956
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Balanced Perspectives on Different Urban Ecosystems
Fixing Fuel Poverty
- Author : Brenda Boardman
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2013-05-13
- Total pages : 258
- ISBN : 9781136545733
- File Size : 19,7 Mb
- Total Download : 302
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Since its publication in the early 90s, Brenda Boardman's Fuel Poverty has been the reference text for those wishing to learn about this complex subject. In this, its successor, she turns a critical eye to the new millennium and finds that the situation, while now more widely recognised, is far from having improved. The book begins by discussing the political awakening to the issue and exploring just who constitutes the fuel poor. It examines the factors that contribute to fuel poverty - low incomes, high fuel prices and poor quality housing - and looks at and evaluates the policies that have been employed to help reduce the problem. The latter part presents a detailed set of proposals based around long-term improvements in the housing stock that must be employed if we are to avoid a dire situation continuing to get worse. Based on detailed analysis of the situation in the UK, the growth of fuel poverty (sometimes called energy poverty) in other countries and the new focus in European policy makes the book timely and provides important lessons for those who now have to produce policies to tackle the issues.
Shaping an Inclusive Energy Transition
- Author : Margot P. C. Weijnen,Zofia Lukszo,Samira Farahani
- Publisher : Springer Nature
- Release Date : 2021-06-24
- Total pages : 258
- ISBN : 9783030745868
- File Size : 40,6 Mb
- Total Download : 525
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This open access book makes a case for a socially inclusive energy transition and illustrates how engineering and public policy professionals can contribute to shaping an inclusive energy transition, building on a socio-technical systems engineering approach. Accomplishing a net-zero greenhouse gas emissions economy in 2050 is a daunting challenge. This book explores the challenges of the energy transition from the perspectives of technological innovation, public policy, social values and ethics. It elaborates on two particular gaps in the design of public policy interventions focused on decarbonization of the energy system and discusses how both could be remedied. First, the siloed organization of public administration fails to account for the many interdependencies between the energy sector, the mobility system, digital infrastructure and the built environment. Cross-sector coordination of policies and policy instruments is needed to avoid potentially adverse effects upon society and the economy, which may hamper the energy transition rather than accelerate it. Second, energy and climate policies pay insufficient attention to the social values at stake in the energy transition. In addressing these gaps, this book intends to inspire decision makers engaged in the energy transition to embrace the transition as an opportunity to bring a more inclusive society into being.
Renewing Urban Communities
- Author : Mark Scott
- Publisher : Taylor & Francis
- Release Date : 2017-07-05
- Total pages : 285
- ISBN : 9781351904285
- File Size : 32,5 Mb
- Total Download : 777
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Ireland is now an urban society, and both parts of the island have experienced rapid urban-generated growth and new patterns of development in recent years. This inter-disciplinary book adopts an all-Ireland perspective to investigate the tension that exists between sustainable urban development values and rhetoric - such as increased densities, brown field development, the compact city and social inclusion - and the emerging geography of urban Ireland, influenced by consumer and lifestyle choices. The introduction provides an overview of the dynamics of urban change, particularly during the 1990s, and the experience of rapid economic growth. The following chapters are divided into two parts, considering sustainable urban environments, and sustainable communities. This book will appeal to students, academics, policy and decision-makers, given that it adopts both a qualitative and quantitative approach, and introduces a range of new empirical studies covering both physical and social sustainable development.
Energy, Power and Protest on the Urban Grid
- Author : Andres Luque-Ayala,Jonathan Silver
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2016-04-28
- Total pages : 238
- ISBN : 9781317143567
- File Size : 55,7 Mb
- Total Download : 446
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Providing a global overview of experiments around the transformation of cities' electricity networks and the social struggles associated with this change, this book explores the centrality of electricity infrastructures in the urban configuration of social control, segregation, integration, resource access and poverty alleviation. Through multiple accounts from a range of global cities, this edited collection establishes an agenda that recognises the uneven, and often historical, geographies of urban electricity networks, prompting attempts to re-wire the infrastructure configurations of cities and predicating protest and resistance from residents and social movements alike. Through a robust theoretical engagement with established work around the politics of urban infrastructures, the book frames the transformation of electricity systems in the context of power and resistance across urban life, drawing links between environmental and social forms of sustainability. Such an agenda can provide both insight and inspiration in seeking to build fairer and more sustainable urban futures that bring electricity infrastructures to the fore of academic and policy attention.
Urban Energy Systems
- Author : James Keirstead,Nilay Shah
- Publisher : Routledge
- Release Date : 2013-03-05
- Total pages : 336
- ISBN : 9781135076313
- File Size : 16,6 Mb
- Total Download : 577
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Energy demands of cities need to be met more sustainably. This book analyses the technical and social systems that satisfy these needs and asks how methods can be put into practice to achieve this. Drawing on analytical tools and case studies developed at Imperial College London, the book presents state-of-the-art techniques for examining urban energy systems as integrated systems of technologies, resources, and people. Case studies include: a history of the evolution of London's urban energy system, from pre-history to present day a history of the growth of district heating and cogeneration in Copenhagen, one of the world's most energy efficient cities an analysis of changing energy consumption and environmental impacts in the Kenyan city of Nakuru over a thirty year period an application of uncertainty and sensitivity analysis techniques to show how Newcastle-upon-Tyne can reach its 2050 carbon emission targets designing an optimized low-carbon energy system for a new UK eco-town, showing how it would meet ever more stringent emissions targets. For students, researchers, planners, engineers, policymakers and all those looking to make a contribution to urban sustainability.
Fuel Poverty
- Author : Great Britain: Department of Energy and Climate Change
- Publisher : Stationery Office/Tso
- Release Date : 2013-07-01
- Total pages : 44
- ISBN : 0101867328
- File Size : 47,7 Mb
- Total Download : 478
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Fuel poverty is a serious problem faced by millions of households in the UK. This paper builds on Professor John Hills' report on fuel poverty (March 2012, DECC) and the Government's proposals outlined in 'Fuel poverty: changing the framework for measurement' (Cm. 8440, Sept. 2012, ISBN 9780101844024). Section 1 provides an overview of why fuel poverty matters, revisiting Professor Hills' work which established fuel poverty as a long-term structural problem and provided a new understanding that the issue is driven not only by low income but by the characteristics of the homes in which people live. Section 2 sets out the new Low Income High Cost indicator which will be used to define the problem. Section 3 looks at what this new approach can tell about who the fuel poor are and the scale of the problems they face, and sets out guiding principles. Section 4 examines the current policy package against the new framework whilst section 5 sets out means to target those most in need and identifies short term priorities. Finally section 6 lays out the new target and its planned introduction through secondary legislation. The aim will be to ensure fuel poor households attain a certain standard of energy efficiency in their homes as well as providing other assistance for managing bills or offering immediate help with energy bills.