fbpx
Wikipedia

Benjamin K. Sovacool

Benjamin K. Sovacool is an American academic who is director of the Institute for Global Sustainability at Boston University as well as Professor of Earth and Environment at Boston University.[1] He was formerly Director of the Danish Center for Energy Technology at the Department of Business Development and Technology and a professor of social sciences at Aarhus University. He is also professor of energy policy at the University of Sussex, where he formerly directed the Center on Innovation and Energy Demand and the Sussex Energy Group. He has written on energy policy, environmental issues, and science and technology policy. Sovacool is also the editor-in-chief of Energy Research & Social Science.

Benjamin K. Sovacool
Benjamin K. Sovacool, May 2010
Alma materJohn Carroll University
Known for
AwardsDedication to Diversity and Justice Award (2015)
Scientific career
Institutions

Education Edit

Sovacool has a bachelor's degree in Philosophy and Communication Studies (2001) from John Carroll University, master's degrees in Rhetoric (2003) from Wayne State University and in Science Policy (2005) Virginia Tech, and a PhD (2006) in Science and Technology Studies from Virginia Tech.[2][3]

Career Edit

While at Virginia Tech, Sovacool worked as a graduate student on a grant from the National Science Foundation's Electric Power Networks Efficiency and Security Program analyzing the barriers to small-scale renewable electricity sources and distributed generation in the United States.[4] He worked in research and advisory capacities for the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, Semiconductor Materials and Equipment International, the Global Environment Facility, the World Bank Group, and the Union of Concerned Scientists.[4]

From 2007 until 2011 Sovacool was at the National University of Singapore, where he led research projects supported by the MacArthur Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation investigating how to improve energy security for impoverished rural communities throughout Asia.[5]

Sovacool was an associate professor at Vermont Law School and founded their Energy Security & Justice Program in 2011.[5] In 2012, Sovacool was an Erasmus Mundus Visiting Scholar at Central European University in Hungary. He consulted for the Asian Development Bank, United Nations Development Program, and United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.[4] He was awarded the Dedication to Diversity and Justice Award from the American Bar Association in 2015.[6]

In 2013, Sovacool was Director of the Center for Energy Technology and professor of business and social sciences at Aarhus University in Denmark.[7][8] He is also Professor of Energy Policy at the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom.[9] Sovacool lectures on energy security, alternative and renewable energy, environmental economics, and energy policy.[4]

In 2014, Sovacool became the founding editor-in-chief of Energy Research & Social Science, which explores the interactions between energy systems and society.[10][11]

Publications Edit

Sovacool has authored numerous academic articles and book chapters and has written opinion editorials for The Wall Street Journal and the San Francisco Chronicle.[4] According to Google Scholar his scientific publication has (as of September 2022) an h-index of 113.[12]

In 2007, Sovacool co-edited Energy and American Society: Thirteen Myths.[13][14] In 2008, he wrote The Dirty Energy Dilemma: What’s Blocking Clean Power in the United States which was published by Praeger and won a 2009 Nautilus Book Award.[15]

In Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power (2011) Sovacool says, following a detailed analysis, that there is a "consensus among a broad base of independent, nonpartisan experts that nuclear power plants are a poor choice for producing electricity", and that "energy efficiency programs and renewable power technologies are better than nuclear power plants".[16] In 2016, Sovacool, Andrew Lawrence and Andrew Stirling published an article in Climate Policy claiming that pro-nuclear energy countries had acted more slowly to address climate change.[17][18] Critics pointed out errors in the data the article was based on,[19][20] and the authors retracted it, as the two errors "had the combined effect of invalidating key findings of this paper".[21]

In October 2020, Sovacool and Stirling published another article in Nature Energy[22] analysing data from 123 countries over 25 years that again argues that pro-nuclear countries do not show significantly lower carbon emissions, and that in poorer countries nuclear programmes are associated with relatively higher carbon emissions.[23][24] The results have been disputed in two publications. Harrison Fell et al. analyzed the same data as Sovacool did, finding that "nuclear power and renewable energy are both associated with lower per capita CO2 emissions with effects of similar magnitude".[25] Friedrich Wagner investigated the CO2 emissions caused by nuclear and renewable power. His "results are in complete contradiction" with the Sovacool study.[26] Sovacool and colleagues have challenged such publications, with a rebuttal in Nature Energy noting that "rather than finding any critical flaws in our analysis," such studies instead "have only effectively confirmed our own basis for raising critical questions about the assumptions of parity in the carbon reducing effects of nuclear and renewable strategies."[27]

Books Edit

  • Sovacool, BK and MA Brown (Eds.) Energy and American Society: Thirteen Myths (New York: Springer, 2007)
  • Sovacool, BK. The Dirty Energy Dilemma: What’s Blocking Clean Power in the United States (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2008)
  • Mendonça, M, D Jacobs, and BK Sovacool. Powering the Green Economy: The Feed-In Tariff Handbook, (London: Earthscan, 2009)
  • Sovacool, BK (Ed.) Routledge Handbook of Energy Security (London: Routledge, 2010)
  • Sovacool, BK. Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power: A Critical Global Assessment of Atomic Energy (London: World Scientific, 2011)
  • Brown, MA and BK Sovacool. Climate Change and Global Energy Security: Technology and Policy Options (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2011)
  • Sovacool, BK and SV Valentine. The National Politics of Nuclear Power: Economics, Security, and Governance (London: Routledge, 2012)
  • Sovacool, BK and IM Drupady. Energy Access, Poverty, and Development: The Governance of Small-Scale Renewable Energy in Developing Asia (New York: Ashgate, 2012)
  • Sovacool, BK and CJ Cooper. The Governance of Energy Megaprojects: Politics, Hubris, and Energy Security (London: Edward Elgar, 2013)
  • Sovacool, BK. Energy & Ethics: Justice and the Global Energy Challenge (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2013)
  • Sovacool, BK, R Sidortsov, and B Jones. Energy Security, Equality and Justice (London: Routledge, 2013)
  • Halff, Antoine, J Rozhon and BK Sovacool (Eds.). Energy Poverty: Global Challenges and Local Solutions (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014)
  • Sovacool, BK and MH Dworkin. Global Energy Justice: Principles, Problems, and Practices (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014)
  • Sovacool, BK (Ed.). Energy Security (London: Sage, Six Volumes, 2014)
  • Sovacool, BK (Ed.). Energy, Poverty, and Development (London: Routledge Critical Concepts in Development Studies Series, Four Volumes, 2014)
  • Sovacool, BK and BO Linnér. The Political Economy of Climate Change Adaptation (Basingstoke UK/New York United States: Palgrave Macmillan and the Nature Publishing Group, 2015)
  • Sovacool, BK, MA Brown, and SV Valentine. Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: Fifteen Contentious Questions (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016)
  • Van de Graaf, T, BK Sovacool, F Kern, A Ghosh, and MT Klare (Eds.). The Palgrave Handbook of the International Political Economy of Energy (Basingstoke UK/New York United States: Palgrave Macmillan Handbooks in International Political Economy Series, 2016)
  • Valentine, SV, MA Brown, and BK Sovacool. Empowering the Great Energy Transition: Policy for a Low-Carbon Future (New York: Columbia University Press, 2019)
  • Sovacool, BK. Visions of Energy Futures: Imagining and Innovating Low-Carbon Transitions (New York and London: Routledge, 2019).
  • Noel, L, J Kester, G Zarazua de Rubens, and BK Sovacool. Vehicle-to-Grid: A Sociotechnical Transition Beyond Electric Mobility (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2019).
  • Van de Graaf, T and BK Sovacool. Global Energy Politics (Oxford: Polity Press, 2020).

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "BU Institute to Focus on Equity and Justice in the Climate Change Fight". Boston University. 2022-03-15. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  2. ^ "Benjamin Sovacool's academic curriculum". Aarhus University. 15 October 2020.
  3. ^ Grimes, Cathy (9 May 2019). "Benjamin Sovacool to receive the 2019 Graduate Alumni Achievement Award". Virginia Tech Daily. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e Vermont Law School (2013). . Archived from the original on 2013-05-28.
  5. ^ a b . Vermont Law School. January 24, 2012. Archived from the original on March 13, 2012.
  6. ^ ABA. . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
  7. ^ Aarhus University q. "Professor Benjamin Sovacool".
  8. ^ Aarhus University (2013). . PMA 2014 Conference. Archived from the original on 2013-09-12.
  9. ^ University of Sussex. "Benjamin Sovacool joins Sussex Energy Group".
  10. ^ "Source details: Energy Research & Social Science". Scopus preview. Elsevier. Retrieved 2017-02-02.
  11. ^ https://www.journals.elsevier.com/energy-research-and-social-science/news/energy-research-social-science-tops-recent-journal-rankings%7Ctitle= Energy Research & Social Science tops recent journal rankings
  12. ^ "Benjamin Sovacool - User profile". Google Scholar. 2022-09-20. Retrieved 2022-09-20.
  13. ^ Sioshansi, Fereidoon P. (December 2007). "Energy and American Society—Thirteen Myths, B. Sovacool, M. Brown (Eds.). Springer, Berlin (2007, ISBN: 978-1-4020-5563-8, 371pp., $79.95". Energy Policy. 35 (12): 6554–6555. doi:10.1016/j.enpol.2007.08.008.
  14. ^ Pasqualetti, Martin J. (2008). "Review of Energy and American Society--Thirteen Myths, B. Sovacool, M. Brown (eds.)". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 8 (2): 504–505. doi:10.1080/00045600801944210. S2CID 128859012.
  15. ^ Curriculum Vitae: Dr. Benjamin K. Sovacool[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Benjamin K. Sovacool (2011). Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power (PDF). World Scientific. pp. 248–250. doi:10.1142/7895. ISBN 978-981-4322-75-1.
  17. ^ Lawrence, Andrew; Sovacool, Benjamin; Stirling, Andrew (3 July 2016). "RETRACTED ARTICLE: Nuclear energy and path dependence in Europe's 'Energy union': coherence or continued divergence?". Climate Policy. 16 (5): 622–641. doi:10.1080/14693062.2016.1179616.
  18. ^ . Science News. 22 August 2016. Archived from the original on 23 August 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  19. ^ "Refutation of recent Climate Policy paper written by Lawrence, Sovacool & Stirling". 2 September 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  20. ^ Thompson, Nicholas (12 October 2016). "A Response to Lawrence, Sovacool, and Stirling". Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  21. ^ Lawrence, Andrew; Sovacool, Benjamin; Stirling, Andrew (2016). "Authorial statement of article withdrawal" (PDF). Climate Policy. 16 (5): ri–rii. doi:10.1080/14693062.2016.1260249. S2CID 157939679.
  22. ^ Sovacool, Benjamin K.; Schmid, Patrick; Stirling, Andy; Walter, Goetz; MacKerron, Gordon (November 2020). "Differences in carbon emissions reduction between countries pursuing renewable electricity versus nuclear power" (PDF). Nature Energy. 5 (11): 928–935. Bibcode:2020NatEn...5..928S. doi:10.1038/s41560-020-00696-3. S2CID 225107514.
  23. ^ Vowles, Neil (5 October 2020). "Two's a crowd: Nuclear and renewables don't mix. Only the latter can deliver truly low carbon energy says new study". News. University of Sussex. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  24. ^ Satherley, Dan (9 October 2020). "Nuclear power won't solve climate change - study". Newshub. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  25. ^ Fell, Harrison; Gilbert, Alexander; Jenkins, Jesse; Mildenberger, Matto (8 January 2021). "Reply to 'Differences in Carbon Emissions Reduction between Countries Pursuing Renewable Electricity Versus Nuclear Power,' by Sovacool Et Al. (2020)". doi:10.2139/ssrn.3762762. S2CID 234183759. SSRN 3762762. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  26. ^ Wagner, Friedrich (2021-05-20). "CO2 emissions of nuclear power and renewable energies: a statistical analysis of European and global data". The European Physical Journal Plus. 136 (5): 562. Bibcode:2021EPJP..136..562W. doi:10.1140/epjp/s13360-021-01508-7.
  27. ^ Sovacool, Benjamin K.; Schmid, Patrick; Stirling, Andy; Walter, Goetz; MacKerron, Gordon (January 2022). "Reply to: Nuclear power and renewable energy are both associated with national decarbonization". Nature Energy. 7 (1): 30–31. Bibcode:2022NatEn...7...30S. doi:10.1038/s41560-021-00965-9. S2CID 246363862.

External links Edit

  • Benjamin Sovacool - Google Scholar Citations - List of publications and citations
  • Institute for Global Sustainability

benjamin, sovacool, american, academic, director, institute, global, sustainability, boston, university, well, professor, earth, environment, boston, university, formerly, director, danish, center, energy, technology, department, business, development, technol. Benjamin K Sovacool is an American academic who is director of the Institute for Global Sustainability at Boston University as well as Professor of Earth and Environment at Boston University 1 He was formerly Director of the Danish Center for Energy Technology at the Department of Business Development and Technology and a professor of social sciences at Aarhus University He is also professor of energy policy at the University of Sussex where he formerly directed the Center on Innovation and Energy Demand and the Sussex Energy Group He has written on energy policy environmental issues and science and technology policy Sovacool is also the editor in chief of Energy Research amp Social Science Benjamin K SovacoolBenjamin K Sovacool May 2010Alma materJohn Carroll UniversityKnown forEnergy policy IPCC AR5 reportAwardsDedication to Diversity and Justice Award 2015 Scientific careerInstitutionsAarhus University University of Sussex Boston University Contents 1 Education 2 Career 3 Publications 3 1 Books 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEducation EditSovacool has a bachelor s degree in Philosophy and Communication Studies 2001 from John Carroll University master s degrees in Rhetoric 2003 from Wayne State University and in Science Policy 2005 Virginia Tech and a PhD 2006 in Science and Technology Studies from Virginia Tech 2 3 Career EditWhile at Virginia Tech Sovacool worked as a graduate student on a grant from the National Science Foundation s Electric Power Networks Efficiency and Security Program analyzing the barriers to small scale renewable electricity sources and distributed generation in the United States 4 He worked in research and advisory capacities for the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority Semiconductor Materials and Equipment International the Global Environment Facility the World Bank Group and the Union of Concerned Scientists 4 From 2007 until 2011 Sovacool was at the National University of Singapore where he led research projects supported by the MacArthur Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation investigating how to improve energy security for impoverished rural communities throughout Asia 5 Sovacool was an associate professor at Vermont Law School and founded their Energy Security amp Justice Program in 2011 5 In 2012 Sovacool was an Erasmus Mundus Visiting Scholar at Central European University in Hungary He consulted for the Asian Development Bank United Nations Development Program and United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific 4 He was awarded the Dedication to Diversity and Justice Award from the American Bar Association in 2015 6 In 2013 Sovacool was Director of the Center for Energy Technology and professor of business and social sciences at Aarhus University in Denmark 7 8 He is also Professor of Energy Policy at the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom 9 Sovacool lectures on energy security alternative and renewable energy environmental economics and energy policy 4 In 2014 Sovacool became the founding editor in chief of Energy Research amp Social Science which explores the interactions between energy systems and society 10 11 Publications EditSee also Environmental impact of wind power Birds Sovacool has authored numerous academic articles and book chapters and has written opinion editorials for The Wall Street Journal and the San Francisco Chronicle 4 According to Google Scholar his scientific publication has as of September 2022 an h index of 113 12 In 2007 Sovacool co edited Energy and American Society Thirteen Myths 13 14 In 2008 he wrote The Dirty Energy Dilemma What s Blocking Clean Power in the United States which was published by Praeger and won a 2009 Nautilus Book Award 15 In Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power 2011 Sovacool says following a detailed analysis that there is a consensus among a broad base of independent nonpartisan experts that nuclear power plants are a poor choice for producing electricity and that energy efficiency programs and renewable power technologies are better than nuclear power plants 16 In 2016 Sovacool Andrew Lawrence and Andrew Stirling published an article in Climate Policy claiming that pro nuclear energy countries had acted more slowly to address climate change 17 18 Critics pointed out errors in the data the article was based on 19 20 and the authors retracted it as the two errors had the combined effect of invalidating key findings of this paper 21 In October 2020 Sovacool and Stirling published another article in Nature Energy 22 analysing data from 123 countries over 25 years that again argues that pro nuclear countries do not show significantly lower carbon emissions and that in poorer countries nuclear programmes are associated with relatively higher carbon emissions 23 24 The results have been disputed in two publications Harrison Fell et al analyzed the same data as Sovacool did finding that nuclear power and renewable energy are both associated with lower per capita CO2 emissions with effects of similar magnitude 25 Friedrich Wagner investigated the CO2 emissions caused by nuclear and renewable power His results are in complete contradiction with the Sovacool study 26 Sovacool and colleagues have challenged such publications with a rebuttal in Nature Energy noting that rather than finding any critical flaws in our analysis such studies instead have only effectively confirmed our own basis for raising critical questions about the assumptions of parity in the carbon reducing effects of nuclear and renewable strategies 27 Books Edit Sovacool BK and MA Brown Eds Energy and American Society Thirteen Myths New York Springer 2007 Sovacool BK The Dirty Energy Dilemma What s Blocking Clean Power in the United States Westport CT Praeger 2008 Mendonca M D Jacobs and BK Sovacool Powering the Green Economy The Feed In Tariff Handbook London Earthscan 2009 Sovacool BK Ed Routledge Handbook of Energy Security London Routledge 2010 Sovacool BK Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power A Critical Global Assessment of Atomic Energy London World Scientific 2011 Brown MA and BK Sovacool Climate Change and Global Energy Security Technology and Policy Options Cambridge MIT Press 2011 Sovacool BK and SV Valentine The National Politics of Nuclear Power Economics Security and Governance London Routledge 2012 Sovacool BK and IM Drupady Energy Access Poverty and Development The Governance of Small Scale Renewable Energy in Developing Asia New York Ashgate 2012 Sovacool BK and CJ Cooper The Governance of Energy Megaprojects Politics Hubris and Energy Security London Edward Elgar 2013 Sovacool BK Energy amp Ethics Justice and the Global Energy Challenge New York Palgrave MacMillan 2013 Sovacool BK R Sidortsov and B Jones Energy Security Equality and Justice London Routledge 2013 Halff Antoine J Rozhon and BK Sovacool Eds Energy Poverty Global Challenges and Local Solutions Oxford Oxford University Press 2014 Sovacool BK and MH Dworkin Global Energy Justice Principles Problems and Practices Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2014 Sovacool BK Ed Energy Security London Sage Six Volumes 2014 Sovacool BK Ed Energy Poverty and Development London Routledge Critical Concepts in Development Studies Series Four Volumes 2014 Sovacool BK and BO Linner The Political Economy of Climate Change Adaptation Basingstoke UK New York United States Palgrave Macmillan and the Nature Publishing Group 2015 Sovacool BK MA Brown and SV Valentine Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy Fifteen Contentious Questions Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2016 Van de Graaf T BK Sovacool F Kern A Ghosh and MT Klare Eds The Palgrave Handbook of the International Political Economy of Energy Basingstoke UK New York United States Palgrave Macmillan Handbooks in International Political Economy Series 2016 Valentine SV MA Brown and BK Sovacool Empowering the Great Energy Transition Policy for a Low Carbon Future New York Columbia University Press 2019 Sovacool BK Visions of Energy Futures Imagining and Innovating Low Carbon Transitions New York and London Routledge 2019 Noel L J Kester G Zarazua de Rubens and BK Sovacool Vehicle to Grid A Sociotechnical Transition Beyond Electric Mobility Basingstoke Palgrave 2019 Van de Graaf T and BK Sovacool Global Energy Politics Oxford Polity Press 2020 See also Edit100 renewable energy Renewable energy commercialization Renewable energy in developing countries Comparisons of life cycle greenhouse gas emissionsReferences Edit BU Institute to Focus on Equity and Justice in the Climate Change Fight Boston University 2022 03 15 Retrieved 2022 11 09 Benjamin Sovacool s academic curriculum Aarhus University 15 October 2020 Grimes Cathy 9 May 2019 Benjamin Sovacool to receive the 2019 Graduate Alumni Achievement Award Virginia Tech Daily Retrieved 9 October 2020 a b c d e Vermont Law School 2013 Benjamin K Sovacool Biography Archived from the original on 2013 05 28 a b VT Law School Launches Energy Security amp Justice Project Vermont Law School January 24 2012 Archived from the original on March 13 2012 ABA Environment Energy and Resources Dedication to Diversity and Justice Award Past Award Recipients Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2016 01 11 Aarhus University q Professor Benjamin Sovacool Aarhus University 2013 Keynote speakers PMA 2014 Conference Archived from the original on 2013 09 12 University of Sussex Benjamin Sovacool joins Sussex Energy Group Source details Energy Research amp Social Science Scopus preview Elsevier Retrieved 2017 02 02 https www journals elsevier com energy research and social science news energy research social science tops recent journal rankings 7Ctitle Energy Research amp Social Science tops recent journal rankings Benjamin Sovacool User profile Google Scholar 2022 09 20 Retrieved 2022 09 20 Sioshansi Fereidoon P December 2007 Energy and American Society Thirteen Myths B Sovacool M Brown Eds Springer Berlin 2007 ISBN 978 1 4020 5563 8 371pp 79 95 Energy Policy 35 12 6554 6555 doi 10 1016 j enpol 2007 08 008 Pasqualetti Martin J 2008 Review of Energy and American Society Thirteen Myths B Sovacool M Brown eds Annals of the Association of American Geographers 8 2 504 505 doi 10 1080 00045600801944210 S2CID 128859012 Curriculum Vitae Dr Benjamin K Sovacool permanent dead link Benjamin K Sovacool 2011 Contesting the Future of Nuclear Power PDF World Scientific pp 248 250 doi 10 1142 7895 ISBN 978 981 4322 75 1 Lawrence Andrew Sovacool Benjamin Stirling Andrew 3 July 2016 RETRACTED ARTICLE Nuclear energy and path dependence in Europe s Energy union coherence or continued divergence Climate Policy 16 5 622 641 doi 10 1080 14693062 2016 1179616 Pro nuclear countries making slower progress on climate targets Science News 22 August 2016 Archived from the original on 23 August 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2020 Refutation of recent Climate Policy paper written by Lawrence Sovacool amp Stirling 2 September 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2020 Thompson Nicholas 12 October 2016 A Response to Lawrence Sovacool and Stirling Retrieved 9 October 2020 Lawrence Andrew Sovacool Benjamin Stirling Andrew 2016 Authorial statement of article withdrawal PDF Climate Policy 16 5 ri rii doi 10 1080 14693062 2016 1260249 S2CID 157939679 Sovacool Benjamin K Schmid Patrick Stirling Andy Walter Goetz MacKerron Gordon November 2020 Differences in carbon emissions reduction between countries pursuing renewable electricity versus nuclear power PDF Nature Energy 5 11 928 935 Bibcode 2020NatEn 5 928S doi 10 1038 s41560 020 00696 3 S2CID 225107514 Vowles Neil 5 October 2020 Two s a crowd Nuclear and renewables don t mix Only the latter can deliver truly low carbon energy says new study News University of Sussex Retrieved 9 October 2020 Satherley Dan 9 October 2020 Nuclear power won t solve climate change study Newshub Retrieved 9 October 2020 Fell Harrison Gilbert Alexander Jenkins Jesse Mildenberger Matto 8 January 2021 Reply to Differences in Carbon Emissions Reduction between Countries Pursuing Renewable Electricity Versus Nuclear Power by Sovacool Et Al 2020 doi 10 2139 ssrn 3762762 S2CID 234183759 SSRN 3762762 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Wagner Friedrich 2021 05 20 CO2 emissions of nuclear power and renewable energies a statistical analysis of European and global data The European Physical Journal Plus 136 5 562 Bibcode 2021EPJP 136 562W doi 10 1140 epjp s13360 021 01508 7 Sovacool Benjamin K Schmid Patrick Stirling Andy Walter Goetz MacKerron Gordon January 2022 Reply to Nuclear power and renewable energy are both associated with national decarbonization Nature Energy 7 1 30 31 Bibcode 2022NatEn 7 30S doi 10 1038 s41560 021 00965 9 S2CID 246363862 External links EditBenjamin Sovacool Google Scholar Citations List of publications and citations Institute for Global Sustainability Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Benjamin K Sovacool amp oldid 1170606753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.