Abstract

The main purpose of the article was to identify and present the current situation and changes in higher education in the field of electricity and energy studies in the European Union countries. The specific objectives include determining the degree of concentration of education in the fields of electricity and energy in the EU countries, showing the directions of their changes, types of dominant education in this field, establishing the correlation between education in the fields of electricity and energy and the parameters assessing the achievement of circular economy assumptions in the energy sector. All Member States of the European Union were deliberately selected for research. The research period covered the years 2013–2018. The source of the materials is a literature review on the subject and Eurostat data. For the analysis and presentation of materials, methods such as descriptive, tabular, graphical, dynamics indicators with a constant basis, Gini concentration coefficient, concentration analysis using the Lorenz curve, coefficient of variation, Pearson’s linear correlation coefficient were used. A high concentration of education in the fields of electricity and energy was found in several EU countries, the largest in countries with the highest energy consumption, i.e., in France and Poland. Changes in the level of concentration practically did not take place, only in the case of master’s studies, there was an increase in concentration. However, the EU countries did not differ significantly in terms of the structure of the number of students studying electricity and energy.

Highlights

  • Circular economy (CE) is a concept aiming to rationalize the use of resources and reducing the negative environmental impact of manufactured products

  • The specific objectives include determining the degree of concentration of education in the fields of electricity and energy in the EU countries, showing the directions of their changes, types of dominant education in this field, establishing the correlation between education in the fields of electricity and energy and the parameters assessing the achievement of circular economy assumptions in the energy sector

  • The relationship between the number of students studying electricity and energy in the EU countries and the parameters assessing the achievement of circular economy assumptions in the energy sector was examined

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Summary

Introduction

Circular economy (CE) is a concept aiming to rationalize the use of resources and reducing the negative environmental impact of manufactured products. The concept of a circular economy was first used in 1981 by Wathler Stahel and Genevieve Redayw. In their work entitled “Jobs for Tomorrow, the Potential for Substituting Manpower for Energy” they presented a model of what they called looped or circular economy. They described the influence of such model on a rational approach to production, employment, price competitiveness, and above all, to saving resources and preventing the formation of post-production waste. The waste input–output model has been extended to wide areas of industrial ecology including material flow

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