Charging Infrastructure for Electric Vehicles Energy Transition and Charging Infrastructure for Electric Vehicles Symposium Applied Research on Charging Infrastructure (ARCHI) Amsterdam, 24 January 2017 Kornelis Blok Professor Energy Systems Analysis, Delft University of Technology Director of Science, Ecofys @kornelisblok
The Paris Agreement in a nutshell Nationally Determined Contributions from countries 2 °C pathway Source: Ecofys
The Paris Agreement in a nutshell $100 billion climate finance Nationally Determined Contributions from countries … and lots of commitments from companies, cities and others Five Year Revision Cycle Source: Ecofys
The Paris Agreement in a nutshell $100 billion climate finance Nationally Determined Contributions from countries … and lots of commitments from companies, cities and others Five Year Revision Cycle New target “well below 2 °C, with ambition to stay below 1.5 °C Source: Ecofys
Energy demand in OECD countries is falling Final energy demand, source: IEA
New renewable energy sources are growing rapidly Share of renewable energy sources (excluding hydropower) in electricity production (%) Source: BP
Global energy use can stabilize below current levels
Electricity as backbone of the future energy system
Source: Ecofys
The importance of charging infrastructure: a case study for Aruba
The importance of charging infrastructure: a case study for Aruba
Contact Prof. dr. Kornelis Blok Professor Energy Systems Analysis Faculty Technology, Policy and Management Jaffalaan 5, Room B3.060 2628 BX Delft E-mail: k.blok@tudelft.nl Phone: +31-15-27 85751 Twitter: @kornelisblok