Climate Change Industry Research Reports

Report 4600: Transportation

Report 4600: Transportation is an assessment and quantitative analysis of an emerging industry of transportation business opportunities resulting from climate change policy. Sub-segments quantified include U.S. sales and growth in Alternative Fuel Vehicles: Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEVs); Electric Vehicles (EV); Flex Fuel Vehicles (FFVs); and Other Alternative Fuel Vehicles (AFVs: Cars, Trucks, Buses); also Bio-fuels (ethanol, bio-diesel) and other Alternative Fuels (CNG, LNG); plus Transportation Planning & Engineering, Public Transit and even Bicycles.

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Report 4700: Carbon Markets

Report 4700: Carbon Markets focuses on Carbon Markets; it offers estimates of regulated and voluntary carbon trading activity. It also looks at carbon emissions brokerages, voluntary carbon offset markets, agricultural and forestry carbon offsets, the participation of consulting and engineering firms in the carbon market, and individual company profiles.

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Report 4800: Climate Change Adaptation

Report 4800: Climate Change Adaptation focuses on the U.S. climate change adaptation industry and prospects for global growth. The U.S. climate change adaptation industry is just emerging, led by consulting & engineering firms doing assessment and planning work. CCBJ estimates that adaptation will grow to a billion-dollar industry in the United States by 2015, followed by exponential growth once design and construction of adaptation measures begin in earnest.

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Report 4900: Climate Change Consulting

Report 4900: Climate Change Consulting (updated for Q1 of 2010) focuses on the Climate Change Consulting Industry, but also includes detailed analysis of the broader area of Consulting & Engineering services in the Climate Change Industry CCBJ estimates place today's climate change consulting market at $1.9 billion worldwide and $670 million in the United States, but those figures are expected to more than double in the next five years, fully accounting for the financial meltdown of 2008. The market is analogous to the U.S. environmental consulting & engineering market that was about $600 million in billings in 1976, six years after the foundation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, that is now $27 billion today.

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