PhD Project: The feasibility of emerging technologies for meeting climate targets
In this project, PhD Candidate Tsimafei Kazlou aims to advance the understanding of the feasibility of deploying emerging technologies to meet climate targets.
About the research project
Meeting the Paris Agreement requires rapid transformations of energy supply and demand, supported by a range of emerging climate change mitigation technologies – offshore wind, electrolysers, carbon capture and storage (CCS), and negative emission technologies (NET). Yet the immaturity of these technologies invokes debates about their feasibility and potential to be ‘on-track’ and ‘on-time’ for climate targets. When and to what extent can their deployment be scaled up and accelerated given today’s low market penetration levels?
This PhD project aims to advance the understanding of the feasibility of deploying emerging technologies to meet climate targets by building on methods of using empirical evidence of past transitions.
Publications
Thesis publications
Kazlou, T., Cherp, A., and Jewell, J. 2024. “Feasible deployment of carbon capture and storage and the requirements of climate targets.” Nature Climate Change 14: 1047–1055.
Jewell, J., and Kazlou, T. 2024. “Major step up in carbon capture and storage needed to keep warming below 2 °C.” Nature Climate Change 14: 1022–1023.
People
Project manager
Tsimafei Kazlou PhD Candidate
Supervisors
Jessica Jewell Professor, Chalmers University of Technology & CET