Person:
Lukas, Aditya

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Lukas, Aditya Alexander
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Last updated:November 24, 2025
Biography
Aditya Lukas is a Senior Energy Specialist with the World Bank’s Europe and Central Asia Energy Unit, bringing over 15 years of experience in energy efficiency and the broader energy sector. Since joining the World Bank in 2016, he has worked on a wide range of projects and technical assistance programs focused on energy efficiency, renewable energy, and clean heating across Türkiye, Poland, the Western Balkans, India, and Ghana. He has also authored several World Bank knowledge products on energy efficiency. Prior to joining the Bank, Aditya worked at McKinsey & Company, advising clients across Europe and Asia primarily in the energy sector on strategic and operational issues. He also served as a Research Associate in academia, where he supported water utilities in improving energy efficiency in the water sector. Aditya holds a PhD and MSc in Civil Engineering from the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna (Austria), and an MSc in Natural Resources Management from Lincoln University, New Zealand.

Publication Search Results

Now showing1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication
    Energy Efficiency as a Driver of More and Better Goods and Services
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2021-04-16) Benoit, Philippe; Zinetti, Silvia; De Wit, Joerie; Lukas, Aditya
    Energy efficiency is seen more often as a means of reducing energy consumption and costs than as a way to expand the production of goods and services. But it can help raise a company’s manufacturing capacity, improve the quantity and quality of a city’s water supply, and provide more heating and cooling to improve attendance and learning in schools - all while keeping energy costs down. It is important to recognize such benefits of energy efficiency for low- and middle-income countries - and to factor them into economic assessments of projects and programs.
  • Publication
    Residential Energy Efficiency
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2018-12-14) Lukas, Aditya
    Over the next decade, energy consumption in the residential subsector is expected to grow faster than in the rest of the building sector owing to expected increases in both the number of households and in per capita energy use as incomes rise. Improvements in residential energy efficiency would provide multiple benefits to individual households and society at large but are often blocked by a number of barriers.
  • Publication
    Energy Efficiency in Industry
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2018-12-14) Dobrotkova, Zuzana; Lukas, Aditya; Singh, Jas
    The vast energy efficiency potential in industry remains largely untapped, impairing global efforts to mitigate climate change. With the right steps, energy savings by 2035 could rise to 668 million metric tons of oil equivalent in OECD countries, and up to five times more in developing countries.