the research consultancy for energy technologies

Energy Efficiency

  • Scooter Wars?

    Scooter Wars?

    E-scooters can re-shape urban mobility, eliminating 2Mbpd of oil demand by 2030, competing amidst the ascent of “electric vehicles” and re-shaping urban economies.  These implications follow from e-scooters having 25-50x higher energy efficiencies, higher convenience and c50% lower costs than gasoline vehicles, over short 1-2 mile journeys. Our 12-page note explores the consequences.

    Read more

  • Energy Economics of e-Scooters

    Energy Economics of e-Scooters

    This workbook contains all our modelling on the energy economics of e-scooters; a transformational technology for urban mobility. Included are our projections of per-mile costs, energy-economics, battery charging times, new electricity demand and displacement of oil demand.

    Read more

  • Aerial Vehicles: why flying cars fly

    Aerial Vehicles: why flying cars fly

    Aerial vehicles will do in the 2020s what electric vehicles did in the 2010s. They will go from a niche technology, to a global mega-trend that no forecaster can ignore. These conclusions stem from a deep-dive analysis into the technology, the fuel economies and the costs, all of which will be transformational.

    Read more

  • Aerial Vehicles Re-Shape Transportation Costs?

    Aerial Vehicles Re-Shape Transportation Costs?

    This model calculates costs per passenger-kilometer for transportation, based on input costs. Aerial vehicles could compete with taxis as early as 2025. By the 2030s, their costs can be c60% below car ownership.

    Read more

  • Vehicles: fuel economy and energy efficiency?

    Vehicles: fuel economy and energy efficiency?

    We have quantified the energy efficiency of 14 different transportation technologies, using real-world data and mechanics equations. Electrification raises auto efficiency 4x, from c15-20% to c60-80%. Novel electric technologies are also unlocking unprecedented fuel economies per passenger mile.

    Read more

  • Turn the Plastic Back into Oil

    Turn the Plastic Back into Oil

    Due to the limitations of mechanical recycling, 85% of the world’s plastic is incinerated, dumped into landfill, or worst of all, ends up in the oceans. An alternative, plastic pyrolysis, is on the cusp of commercialisation.

    Read more

Content by Category