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Does wind power grow faster in Germany or the UK?
Aleh Cherp Aleh Cherp

Does wind power grow faster in Germany or the UK?

In 2001-2014, wind power in the UK followed exactly the same trajectory as wind power in Germany in 1994-2007. Both paths are accurately predicted by the technology diffusion theory and do not show differences that would require additional socio-political explanations. What does require explanation is why the exponential growth of wind power was triggered in Germany and not in the UK in the early- or mid-1990s.

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Comparing energy transitions in Germany and Japan
Aleh Cherp Aleh Cherp

Comparing energy transitions in Germany and Japan

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Aleh Cherp Aleh Cherp

Fukushima’s impact on energy in Japan should be viewed in a broader context

In response to our Comment in Nature (1), Cherp and Jewell write that Japan's ambition for renewables was not altered by the Fukushima disaster (2). Although the evidence they present is technically accurate and their point on the decreased role of nuclear is correct, we would like to bring a broader context to the readers’ attention.

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Russian nuclear industry and wind power
Aleh Cherp Aleh Cherp

Russian nuclear industry and wind power

According to an article in Kommersant, a Russian business daily, Rosatom, the Russian state-owned corporation specialising in manufacturing of nuclear equipment and construction of nuclear plants is on the way to dominate Russian wind power market.

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 Renewables targeted before Fukushima
Aleh Cherp Aleh Cherp

Renewables targeted before Fukushima

In a recent letter to Nature we argue that Japan had become a world's leader in solar energy long before Fukushima. This is both good and bad news for low-carbon energy transitions. On the one hand, there is no need to wait for a nuclear disaster to develop renewable electricity. On the other hand, solar and wind energy will not magically emerge after an earthquake and a tsunami strike a nuclear power plant.

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