WORLD ENERGY OUTLOOK 2005

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Center for Strategic & International Studies Washington, 15 November 2005

WORLD ENERGY OUTLOOK 2005

Middle East & North Africa Insights Chief Economist Dr. Fatih Birol INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Global Energy Trends: Reference Scenario

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

International Energy Price Assumptions The assumed oil-price path in the Reference Scenario has been revised upwards from WEO-2004, in response to the results of detailed analysis of investment prospects: Average IEA crude oil import price, which averages $5 less than WTI, is assumed to ease from a recent peak of over $60 to $40 in 2010 rebounding to $65 in 2030 in nominal terms

In next few years, crude oil production capacity additions, new refinery investments & slower demand growth is expected to drive down prices But limited spare refining capacity, the rising cost of nonMENA crude projects and producer price targets/quotas could temper that decline Higher oil prices result in lower oil-demand, that reaches 115 mb/d in 2030 – 6 mb/d less than in WEO-2004 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

World Primary Energy Demand 18 000 16 000 14 000 Oil

Mtoe

12 000 10 000

Gas

8 000 6 000

Coal

4 000 2 000 0 1970 1971

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Other renewables

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Nuclear Hydro 2030

Oil and gas together account for more than 60% of the growth in energy demand between now and 2030 in the Reference Scenario

Energy-Related CO2 Emissions by Region

2030

2003

India 4%

Other 11%

India 6%

M ENA 6%

Other 16% MENA 8%

China 16%

China 19% T ransition economies

11%

OECD 52%

Transition e conomie s

OECD 42%

9%

24 Gt

37 Gt

Global emissions grow by just over half between now and 2030, with the bulk of the increase coming from developing countries INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

OECD Oil Demand Growth by Sector, 1999-2004 2.0 1.5

mb/d

1.0 0.5 0.0 -0.5

Power generation

Industry

Transport

Other

-1.0

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

In the OECD, the transport sector accounted for almost all the oil demand growth

World Light Oil Product Demand & Crude Oil Quality 32.5

50.0

32.0

45.0

31.5

40.0

31.0

35.0

30.5

API

mb/d

55.0

30.0 30.0 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022 2024 2026 2028 2030 World Light Oil Product Demand

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Average Crude Oil Quality

Oil quality will fall while light product demand will rise a key challenge for the refining industry

World Oil Production Shifts Away from OECD

10.2 mb/d

2.2 mb/d

20.2 mb/d 30.9 mb/d

13.5 mb/d OECD MENA Other NCO

41.2 mb/d 50.5 mb/d

29.0 mb/d

2004

2030

Global oil production climbs from 82 mb/d in 2004 to 115 mb/d in 2030; OECD share falls from 25% to 12% INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

MENA Share in World Oil and Gas Reserves & Production, 2004

Proven oil reserves

Oil production

Proven gas reserves

Gas production

0%

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

20%

40%

60%

80%

MENA share of global oil & gas reserves is much higher than its share of current production, suggesting strong potential for growth

MENA Energy Trends

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

MENA Crude Oil & NGL Production by Country

50

mb/d

40

30

20

10

0 1970 Iran

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Iraq

1980 Kuwait

1990

2000

Other Middle East

2010 Saudi Arabia

2020 UAE

2030 North Africa

MENA’s share of world oil production rises from 35% in 2004 to 44% in 2030 in the RS, with Saudi production rising to over 18 mb/d

MENA Net Oil Exports

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

MENA plays an increasingly important role in international trade, its net exports surging from 22 mb/d in 2004 to 39 mb/d in 2030

MENA Natural Gas Exports

Billion cubic metres

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

MENA becomes the world’s leading gas exporter, with most of the increase in exports meeting surging European & US LNG demand

MENA Oil Exports through the “Dire Straits”

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Much of the additional oil and LNG exports from MENA in the future will be shipped through just three maritime routes

Saudi Arabia’s Oil Production by Source in the Reference Scenario 20

16

mb/d

12

8

4

0 1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Currently producing fields

Fields awaiting development

Reserve additions and new discoveries

Total production

2030

Based on its reserves and global demand trends, Saudi oil production is projected to reach 18 mb/d in 2030 INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Iran’s Oil Balance in the Reference Scenario 8

mb/d

6

4

2

0 1970

1980

1990

Net exports

2000

2010

2020

2030

Domestic demand

Iran oil production reaches 6.8 mb/d in 2030, but exports increase less rapidly due to strong growth in domestic demand INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Oil Production Outlook in Iraq in the Reference Scenario 8

mb/d

6

4

2

0 1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Currently producing fields

Fields awaiting development

Reserve additions and new discoveries

Total production

2030

Oil production in Iraq is expected to reach around 3 mb/d in 2010 and 8 mb/d in 2030, provided that stability and security are restored INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Algeria’s Natural Gas Balance in the Reference Scenario 250

200

bcm

150

100

50

0 1971

1990

2003

Domestic demand

2010

2020

2030

Net exports

Gas exports, mainly to Europe, are set to reach 144 bcm in 2030, more than double the current level – both via LNG and via pipelines INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

MENA Oil & Gas Export Revenues

2004

Other MENA 7%

2030

Saudi Arabia 35%

Algeria 6%

Qatar 5%

Iraq 6%

Algeria 10% Libya 6% Kuwait 9%

UAE 11% Iran 11%

$313 billion (2004)

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Saudi Arabia 32%

Other MENA 2% Qatar 6%

Libya 7%

Kuwait 10%

Iraq 16% Iran 11%

UAE 10%

$635 billion (2004)

MENA hydrocarbon revenues double by 2030 - the share from gas almost triples to 13%

Total MENA Energy Investment, 2004-2030 Other North Africa Libya Egypt Kuwait Iraq Algeria UAE Qatar Other Middle East Iran Saudi Arabia 0

50

100 150 200 billion dollars (2004) Oil

Gas

250

300

350

Electricity

About $1.5 trillion, or $56 billion per year, of investment are needed to expand capacity & replace facilities that are retired INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Implications of Deferred Investment

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Deferred Investment Scenario How would global energy markets evolve if investment MENA upstream oil industry grew slower than in the Reference Scenario? Investment is assumed to remain constant at its share of historical GDP in each country MENA oil production is lower compared to the Reference Scenario, and the gap is widening over time Oil prices are driven higher - an increase of 32% over the Reference Scenario in 2030 - dragging up gas, coal and electricity prices MENA gas production is also lower compared to the Reference Scenario due to Reduced global gas demand & call on MENA gas Lower associated oil/gas output

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MENA Crude Oil Production (including NGLs) 60 50

mb/d

40 30 20 10 0 1970

1980

Reference Scenario

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

1990

2000

2010

Deferred Investment Scenario

2020

2030 Difference

MENA’s share of global oil production falls from 35% in 2004 to 33% in the DIS. Saudi production reaches 14 mb/d in 2030

MENA Net Natural Gas Exports 500

400 206 bcm

300 bcm

116 bcm

200

24 bcm

100

0 2003

2010

Reference Scenario

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

2020

2030

Deferred Investment Scenario

MENA gas exports are much lower in the DIS, as higher gas prices & lower GDP choke off demand in the main importing regions

World Alternative Policy Scenario

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Oil/Gas Demand in the Reference and Alternative Policy Scenarios 6000

140 120

5000

12.1 mb/d

500 bcm

4000

80 3000 60 2000

40

1000

20 0

0 Oil

2004

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

bcm

mb/d

100

2030 Reference Scenario

Gas 2030 Alternative Scenario

Oil & gas demand in the Alternative Scenario are both 10% lower in 2030 due to significant energy savings and a shift in the energy mix

Global Energy-Related CO2 Emissions in the Reference and Alternative Policy Scenarios 40 000

million tonnes of CO2

35 000

30 000

25 000

20 000 1990

2000

Coal

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Oil

2010

Gas

2020

Alternative Policy Scenario

2030

Reference Scenario

In 2030, CO2 emissions are 16% lower than in the Reference Scenario, but are still more than 50% higher than 1990

Difference in Cost of Oil Consumption in the Alternative and Deferred Investment vs. Reference Scenario, 2005-2030 8 000 6 000

billion dollars (2004)

4 000 2 000

Deferred Investment Additional oil cost

Alternative Scenario Additional investment in energy efficiency

0 -2 000

Net savings

-4 000

Savings in oil cost

-6 000 -8 000

In the Alternative Scenario, the cost of additional investments in energy efficiency are more than offset by savings in fuel cost INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Key Messages If governments stick with current policies, global energy needs will be more than 50% higher in 2030 than today In any plausible scenario, MENA oil & gas resources will be critical to meeting the world’s growing appetite for energy Countries like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq and Algeria will play key roles

Further underinvestment in oil and gas would drive up prices & depress global GDP growth, eventually harming producers too Major importing countries are already considering more vigorous policies to curb demand growth & reduce reliance on oil and gas Continued need for dialogue between producers and consumers to find mutually beneficial outcomes INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY