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Thursday, July 27, 2023
  
 
 
Editorial
 

France possesses one of the largest nuclear power programmes worldwide. The country has 56 operable nuclear reactors producing a total of 61 gigawatts (GW), which is equivalent to over 70% of its electricity. At present, the country holds the highest share of nuclear energy in the world.

Last month, students from the MSc in Energy Management specialisation visited EDF’s Saint-Alban nuclear power plant – a site built in 1979 and located on the Rhone river in the Isère department, 50 km downstream from Lyon. This activity was organised by the ESCP Energy Society and sponsored by our School. Read more here.

Research:

Published Paper on "Relationship between ESG and corporate financial performance in the energy sector: empirical evidence from European companies" by Dr Georgia Makridou, Michalis Doumpos and Christos Lemonakis.

In case you missed it, you can find below the recent research by our MSc in Energy Management students on offshore wind, CCUS, and other relevant topics. 

Energy Programmes at ESCP:

Applications for the October 2024 intake of our MSc in Energy Management will open this fall. If you want to check your eligibility and learn about the admission process you can book a consultation with the admissions team here and submit your CV for a review.

For more experienced professionals, we offer the Executive Master in Future Energy. For more information on the programme, please click here.

Finally, to keep up-to-date on all activities at the Centre, we invite you to join our LinkedIn group, Energy Management @ ESCP and follow us on Facebook.

 
 
Latest News
Thursday, July 20, 2023
 

France possesses one of the largest nuclear power programmes worldwide. The country has 56 operable nuclear reactors producing a total of 61 gigawatts (GW), which is equivalent to over 70% of its electricity. At present, the country holds the highest share of nuclear energy in the world.

Last month, ...

Monday, June 12, 2023
 

Venezuela is the country with the largest proved oil reserves according to the 2022 BP Statistical Review of World Energy, and is also one of the top ten countries with the largest reserves of natural gas. The economy of the South American nation is reliant on its fossil fuel industry, hence its being ...


Energy Programmes

London - Paris - Internship

 

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Our Mission

The EMC Advisory Board

The EMC Advisory Board is comprised of top energy experts from the world's industry leaders in both the public and private sectors.

  • They advise the EMC in several different areas: The curricula of the MSc in Energy Management, ensuring both programmes meet the needs of participants on academic and professional levels.
  • Research that makes a significant impact on best business practices.
  • Current and future activities which benefit the EMC's partners, affiliates, students and alumni.


Research
Published Papers
 

Purpose


Considering environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors is vital in climate change mitigation. Energy companies must incorporate ESG into their business plans, although it unquestionably affects their corporate financial performance (CFP). This paper aims to investigate the effect of ESG on energy companies’ profitability through return on assets by analysing the combined score and individual dimensions of ESG.

 

 
Georgia Makridou, Michalis Doumpos, Christos Lemonakis
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EMC Working Papers
 

The world is currently experiencing one of the worst energy crises in history. Countries all over the world are beginning to adopt greener strategies by funding and covering their energy needs with green and renewable energy sources. Each of these countries has its own rate of development, but they all share a common goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2050. In comparison, the European Union appears to have a faster development rate and a different goal, particularly regarding neutrality, of covering all its member states' energy needs with shareable green energy.

 

 
Arshad Azim Mohammed, Marios Ioannis Kioufis
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EMC Working Papers
 

The United Kingdom is in the right place to become a global leader in the industrial Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) sector. Specific, UK associated industrial development has set a great potential for Industrial Carbon Capture (ICC) application. In fact, the operation of Oil and Gas (O&G) offshore fields has allowed for decades of data on suitable carbon storage sites to be collected, determining that the North Sea’s saline aquifers and depleted reservoirs have a 78,000 MtCO2 capacity. Figure 1 exhibits the distribution of both CO2 emission sources from industrial clusters and offshore storage points.

 

 

 
Juan Pablo Pretelt Villadiego
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EMC Working Papers
 

The fundamental idea of this technical paper is to understand the feasibility and present the robustness of removing the need to decommission an offshore jacket and instead installing an offshore wind tower (with nacelle, rotor blades and generator) on top of it, thereby saving the costs of decommissioning as well as entirely removing the need to design, build and install a substructure for the new offshore wind tower. The economics of scalability are particularly interesting.

 

 
Bikramjit Sengupta
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EMC Working Papers
 

On Thursday 24 November 2022, Renault signed a contract with Voltalia to supply 350 MW of renewable energy over 15 years from 2027, which should account for half the company’s electricity consumption. This type of contract, also known as a corporate Power Purchase Agreement (cPPAs), is an unprecedented commitment in France in terms of power. On the same day, Engie announced a contract to purchase 100MW with Google in the United Kingdom for 12 years from the Moray West offshore wind project off Scotland. Whilst solar and wind remain dominant, contracts are now emerging for biogas, geothermal, and even hydrogen

 

 
Clement Gorin
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EMC Working Papers
 

Funding for the energy industry has historically been dominated by major private or state-controlled institutions. Conventional energies such as fossil fuels require capital outlays of millions and sometimes billions of euros, and hence, understandably, citizens or cooperatives have never fully financed a nuclear powerplant or an offshore oil rig. As the urgency of tackling climate change increases, the energy sector is being reconfigured by financing alternatives made possible by renewable energy technologies that are adaptable to local and community investment. Society is simultaneously becoming increasingly electrified, with global electricity consumption forecast to double from 2021 levels, reaching 50,000 TWh by 2050. Rapid growth in the renewables sector will be crucial for meeting this steady increase in demand.

 

 

 
Félicien Bresson Le Menestrel
READ MORE

 
 
 

 

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