Antonios Katris has been a member of the Centre for Energy Policy (CEP) since 2015 and is currently a Senior Research Fellow. His research focus spans across multiple areas of energy policy, currently focusing on the fuel poverty support measures and the development of low-/zero-carbon fuels. He mainly uses computable general equilibrium (CGE) models to study the economy-wide impacts of net zero interventions and policies and identify trade-offs and implications for policy and other stakeholders (academic and non-academic).
His body of research work includes areas such as the improvement of energy efficiency in residential properties, the electrification of private transportation and residential heating, exploring the impacts of decarbonising industries and offshoring industrial activity, and the potential impacts of nuclear decommissioning in the Scottish economy. More recent research topics include the implementation of social and smart electricity tariffs, the differences in socio-economic impacts between fuel poverty support actions and the implications of the transition to net zero in local economies. Antonios holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Stirling.