Subject guides / Energy Transition
Energy Transition
Also appears in programme titles as: Energy Policy · Sustainable Energy Systems · Energy Systems and Policy
What an energy transition degree actually is
Grids that absorb wind without collapsing, hydrogen economics, the politics of shutting coal plants — the energy transition is the largest infrastructure rebuild in history, and a master's here trains the people who plan it. The field splits into two families that share a name: engineering degrees that design the systems (Delft, KTH), and systems-and-management degrees that finance and govern them (Oxford, Aberdeen).
The naming tells you which family you are in, if you know the code: "Sustainable Energy Technology/Engineering" means an engineering admissions bar; "Energy Systems" or "Energy Transition" means an interdisciplinary one. Aberdeen — Europe's oil capital retooling itself — runs the transition-branded pair, including one of the field's few serious online degrees.
What you study — and the quantitative bar
The engineering family covers generation technologies (solar, wind, storage, hydrogen), grid integration and energy conversion, over two years with thesis research. The systems family mixes energy markets and economics, policy and regulation, and technology fundamentals into one intensive year — Oxford's runs Resources, Systems and Services themes with a dissertation.
Match the bar honestly: Delft and KTH expect an engineering or physical-science first degree and the mathematics that comes with it. Oxford's admits engineers, physical scientists and geographers; Aberdeen's management-flavoured degree is the most accessible to economics and business backgrounds. Applying to the wrong family is this field's classic rejection.
Where it leads
The engineering family exits into developers, utilities, grid operators and OEMs (Ørsted, Vestas, national grids); the systems family into energy agencies (IEA, IRENA), ministries and regulators, energy-market analytics (BloombergNEF-style) and transition consulting. For applicants from energy-exporting developing countries, the policy-side story — "my country must diversify" — is among the strongest scholarship narratives currently being funded.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Engineers from power, oil and gas moving into renewables — the Aberdeen retooling profile
- Economists and policy professionals entering energy markets and regulation via the systems family
- Scholarship applicants from energy-transition countries: diversification narratives fit Chevening and bilateral funders squarely
Probably not the right degree if…
- Non-quantitative applicants aiming at the engineering family — Delft and KTH assume an engineering degree
- Those who want pure climate policy without technology depth: see Climate Governance instead
- Anyone expecting the online route to be scholarship-funded — distance formats fall outside most schemes' full-time rules
Where to study it: the programme map
Two families under one field name: engineering degrees (Delft, KTH — two years, engineering bar) and systems/management degrees (Oxford, Aberdeen — one year, interdisciplinary). The online row is the field's accessibility outlier — and the one most scholarships will not fund.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chalmers University of TechnologySweden | Sustainable Energy Systems, MSc | 24 mo | — | — |
| Delft University of TechnologyNetherlands | MSc Sustainable Energy Technology | 24 mo | — | — |
| Duke UniversityUnited States | Master of Environmental Management | 24 mo | — | — |
| EPFLSwitzerland | Master in Energy Science and Technology | — | — | — |
| ESCP Business SchoolFrance | MSc in Energy Management | — | — | — |
| ETH ZurichSwitzerland | Master in Energy Science and Technology | 24 mo | — | — |
| Hamad Bin Khalifa UniversityQatar | Master of Science in Sustainable Energy | 24 mo | — | — |
| Imperial College LondonUnited Kingdom | Sustainable Energy Futures MSc | 12 mo | GBP 45,000 | — |
| Johns Hopkins UniversityUnited States | MA in Sustainable Energy (Online) | 21 mo | — | — |
| KTH Royal Institute of TechnologySweden | MSc Sustainable Energy Engineering | 24 mo | — | — |
| MCI InnsbruckAustria | Master Environmental, Process & Energy Engineering | 24 mo | — | — |
| Masaryk UniversityCzechia | Energy Policy Studies | 24 mo | — | — |
| Masaryk UniversityCzechia | International Relations and Energy Security | 24 mo | — | — |
| Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyNorway | MSc in Sustainable Energy | 24 mo | — | — |
| Queen's UniversityCanada | Master of Earth and Energy Resources Leadership (MEERL) | 20 mo | — | Minimum 3 years of work experience in the natural-resource sector |
| RWTH Aachen UniversityGermany | Sustainable Management - Water and Energy (M.Sc.) | — | — | — |
| Sciences PoFrance | Master in International Energy Transitions | 24 mo | — | — |
| Technical University of DenmarkDenmark | MSc in Sustainable Energy Systems | 24 mo | — | — |
| Technical University of DenmarkDenmark | MSc in Sustainable Energy Technologies | 24 mo | — | — |
| University of AberdeenUnited Kingdom | MSc Global Energy Transition Enterprise Management | — | — | — |
| University of AberdeenUnited Kingdom | MSc Energy Transition Systems and Technologies (online) | — | — | — |
| University of AlbertaCanada | Master of Business Administration with Specialization in Natural Resources, Energy and the Environment | — | — | — |
| University of British ColumbiaCanada | Master of Engineering Leadership in Clean Energy Engineering | 12 mo | — | Minimum 3 years of relevant energy-sector work experience after the bachelor's degree |
| University of California, BerkeleyUnited States | Master's in Energy and Resources (MA/MS) | 24 mo | — | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Energy Systems | 12 mo | — | — |
| Yale UniversityUnited States | Master of Environmental Management | 24 mo | — | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Family first, then geography. Engineering: Delft and KTH are two-year EU degrees with modest EU fee levels and strong industry pipelines — and KTH sits squarely in the Swedish Institute scholarship's target list. Systems: Oxford's one-year degree is the scholarship-clean UK route; Aberdeen's campus programmes add a lower-fee UK option with unmatched proximity to the retooling North Sea industry.
Funding rules bite in familiar ways: Chevening covers the one-year UK options but not Aberdeen's online degree (full-time residential rule); the two-year Delft/KTH format is irrelevant to Chevening (wrong country) but perfect for Swedish Institute and Erasmus-family routes. Engineering-family applicants should also check university scholarships — Delft and KTH both run their own excellence schemes for non-EU students.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- Chalmers University of Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- Delft University of Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- Duke University — study destination outside the scheme
- EPFL — study destination outside the scheme
- ESCP Business School — study destination outside the scheme
- ETH Zurich — study destination outside the scheme
- Hamad Bin Khalifa University — study destination outside the scheme
- Imperial College London
- Johns Hopkins University — study destination outside the scheme
- KTH Royal Institute of Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- MCI Innsbruck — study destination outside the scheme
- Masaryk University — study destination outside the scheme
- Masaryk University — study destination outside the scheme
- Norwegian University of Science and Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- Queen's University — study destination outside the scheme
- RWTH Aachen University — study destination outside the scheme
- Sciences Po — study destination outside the scheme
- Technical University of Denmark — study destination outside the scheme
- Technical University of Denmark — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Aberdeen — course length not on file
- University of Aberdeen — course length not on file
- University of Alberta — study destination outside the scheme
- University of British Columbia — study destination outside the scheme
- University of California, Berkeley — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Oxford
- Yale University — study destination outside the scheme
- Chalmers University of Technology
- Delft University of Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- Duke University — study destination outside the scheme
- EPFL — study destination outside the scheme
- ESCP Business School — study destination outside the scheme
- ETH Zurich — study destination outside the scheme
- Hamad Bin Khalifa University — study destination outside the scheme
- Imperial College London — study destination outside the scheme
- Johns Hopkins University — study destination outside the scheme
- KTH Royal Institute of Technology
- MCI Innsbruck — study destination outside the scheme
- Masaryk University — study destination outside the scheme
- Masaryk University — study destination outside the scheme
- Norwegian University of Science and Technology — study destination outside the scheme
- Queen's University — study destination outside the scheme
- RWTH Aachen University — study destination outside the scheme
- Sciences Po — study destination outside the scheme
- Technical University of Denmark — study destination outside the scheme
- Technical University of Denmark — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Aberdeen — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Aberdeen — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Alberta — study destination outside the scheme
- University of British Columbia — study destination outside the scheme
- University of California, Berkeley — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Oxford — study destination outside the scheme
- Yale University — study destination outside the scheme
Frequently asked questions
Energy transition vs renewable energy engineering — which guide am I in?
This guide covers the whole transition field, including its policy and market side; Renewable Energy Engineering is the technology-only subfield. If your target roles are in ministries, agencies or markets, stay here; if they are in turbine and grid design, the engineering guide is yours.
Can a non-engineer study energy transition?
Yes — in the systems family. Oxford admits geographers alongside engineers, and Aberdeen's management-flavoured degree welcomes economics and business backgrounds. The engineering family (Delft, KTH) genuinely requires an engineering first degree.
Which scholarships fund this field?
Chevening for the one-year UK campus degrees; the Swedish Institute for KTH; Erasmus-family and university excellence schemes for the EU engineering degrees. Energy-diversification narratives from oil- and coal-dependent countries are a strong match with several funders' priorities.
Is the online Aberdeen degree respected?
It is a regular University of Aberdeen MSc taught by the same energy faculty, and for working engineers it is often the only feasible route. Its constraint is funding, not credibility — most scholarships require full-time residential study, so the online route usually means employer sponsorship or self-funding.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.