World Energy Outlook 2006 AWS

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INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

World Energy Outlook 2006 Ambassador William C. Ramsay Deputy Executive Director International Energy Agency

© OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario: World Primary Energy Demand 18 000

Other renewables Nuclear Biomass

16 000 14 000

Gas

Mtoe

12 000 10 000

Coal

8 000 6 000 4 000

Oil

2 000 0 1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

Global demand grows by more than half over the next quarter of a century, with coal use rising most in absolute terms © OECD/IEA - 2006

World Primary Energy Demand by Region in 2004 Rest of the world 23% OECD 49%

Brazil 2% Russia 6% India 5% China 15%

OECD currently accounts for a half of the global energy demand © OECD/IEA - 2006

Resources to Reserves to Production

Oil resources are finite but we are far from exhausting them The “earliest oil” is concentrated in MENA © OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario:

Increase in World Oil Supply, 2004-2030 25 20

mb/d

Other

15 Iran

10 5

Iraq S.Arabia

0 OPEC conventional

Non-conventional

Non-OPEC conventional

The share of OPEC in world oil supply increases sharply as conventional non-OPEC production peaks towards the middle of next decade © OECD/IEA - 2006

New Oil & Gas Upstream Investment by Source and Destination, 2006-2010 Total investment = $306 billion

Rest of world OPEC 7%

Rest of world

13%

59%

OECD 80%

Source of investment by company base

OECD 19%

OPEC 23%

Distribution of investment

Oil and gas companies based on OECD countries continue to dominate global upstream investment, most of which will go to non-OECD © OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario:

World Inter-regional Natural Gas Trade 1 000 800

bcm

600 400 200 0 2000

2004

2010 Pipelines

2015

2020

2030

LNG

Global gas trade expands by 1.5 times, with two-thirds of the increase coming from Russia, the Middle East & North Africa – mostly as LNG © OECD/IEA - 2006

Annual Increase in Coal Demand

500

million tonnes

400 300 200 100 0 -100 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 China

Rest of the world

Global coal demand in the recent years has grown much faster than previously – mainly driven by China © OECD/IEA - 2006

World Primary Coal Demand Reality?

4000

Reference Scenario

3500

5000

3000

Alternative Policy Scenario

actual

2000

3000

1500

2000

1000 1000 500 0 1970

0 1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

High Oil & Gas prices have prompted a phenomenal coal response without clean coal and other technologies this is not sustainable © OECD/IEA - 2006

mtce

mtoe

2500

4000

Reference Scenario:

Energy-Related CO2 Emissions by Fuel 50

billion tonnes

40 30

Increase of 14.3 Gt (55%)

20 10 0 1990

2004 Coal

2010 Oil

2015

2030 Gas

Half of the projected increase in emissions come from new power stations, mainly using coal & mainly located in China & India © OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario:

Energy-Related CO2 emissions by Region 15

Rest of non-OECD

Gigatonnes of CO2

12 China

9 6

Rest of OECD

United States

3 0 1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

China overtakes the US as the world’s biggest emitter before 2010, though its per capita emissions reach just 60% of those of the OECD in 2030 © OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario:

Cumulative Investment, 2005-2030 $20.2 trillion (in $2005) Electricity 56%

Oil 21% $4.3 trillion

$3.9 trillion Gas 19%

rillion $0.6 t

Biofuels 1%

$11.3 trillion

Coal 3%

Investment needs exceed $20 trillion – $3 trillion more than previously projected, mainly because of higher unit costs © OECD/IEA - 2006

Global Upstream Oil & Gas Investment: Impact of Cost Inflation 300

index (year 2000 = 100)

actual

forecast

250 200 150 100 Year 2000

50 2000

2002 Nominal

2004

2006

2008

2010

Adjusted for cost inflation

Annual upstream investment doubled to $225 billion between 2000 and 2005, but most of the increase was due to cost inflation © OECD/IEA - 2006

Reference Scenario:

0

50%

-2

45%

-4

40%

-6

35%

-8

30% 2005

OPEC market share

mb/d

Impact of Deferred Investment on Oil Demand and OPEC Market Share

2010 2015 2020 2030 Reduction in world oil demand Reference Scenario (right axis) Deferred Investment Case (right axis)

Lower OPEC production pushes up prices, curbing demand & cutting OPEC’s market share

© OECD/IEA - 2006

2003 Blackout Case Studies: Italy - Switzerland

Consequence of under investment impairs security © OECD/IEA - 2006

Energy Poverty: Annual Deaths from Indoor Air Pollution 3

2.8

2 millions

1.6 1.2

1.3

Malaria

Smoke from biomass

1

0 Tuberculosis

HIV/AIDS

Source: World Health Organization

The number of people using dirty traditional biomass for cooking is set to grow from 2.5 billion now to 2.7 billion in 2030 absent new policies © OECD/IEA - 2006

The unmeasured impact of High Prices The "Charcoal Web" in Central African Republic

WEO-2002, NASDA and Radar Technologies France

Non OECD Energy Subsidies amount to 250 billion dollars a year More than 3 times total OECD overseas development assistance spent in 2004 © OECD/IEA - 2006

Distance Travelled to Collect Fuelwood

© OECD/IEA - 2006

The Energy Future Absent New Policies z Security of oil supply is threatened ‰ Oil production in non-OPEC countries is set to peak ‰ Production will be increasingly concentrated in a small

number of countries

z Gas security is also a growing concern ‰ Europe’s production has already peaked - US to follow ‰ Import dependence in both regions & other key regions

will grow absent new policies

z Investment over the next decade will lock in technology that will remain in use for up to 60 years

© OECD/IEA - 2006

INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY

Alternative Policy Scenario

© OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario: Mapping a Better Energy Future z Analyses impact of government policies under consideration to enhance security & curb emissions z Demonstrates that we can significantly reduce growth in energy demand & emissions and stimulate alternative energy production ‰ Oil demand is reduced by 13 mb/d in 2030 - equivalent to

current output of Saudi Arabia & Iran ‰ Oil savings in 2015 savings reach 5 mb/d ‰ CO2 emissions are 6.3 Gt (16%) lower in 2030 – equivalent to the current emissions of US and Canada

z Delaying action by 10 years would reduce the impact on emissions in 2030 by three-quarters

© OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

OECD Oil Imports 36 34

mb/d

5.2 mb/d 32

1.8 mb/d

30 28 26 2005

2010

2015

Reference Scenario

2020

2025

2030

Alternative Policy Scenario

In stark contrast with the Reference Scenario, OECD oil imports level off soon after 2015 & then begin to decline © OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

Global Oil Supply 50%

120 100

mb/d

60 40

40%

OPEC market share

45%

80

20 0

35% 2005

2015

2030

Alternative Policy Scenario

Reduction compared with Reference Scenario

OPEC share in APS (right axis)

OPEC share in RS (right axis)

OPEC’s share of global oil production rises from 40% now to 43% in 2030 in the APS, compared with a jump to 49% in the RS © OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

Gas Imports, 2004-2030 800 - 90 bcm

bcm

600

400

200

- 46 bcm

- 33 bcm

0 United States 2004

European Union Reference Scenario 2030

Japan

Alternative Policy Scenario 2030

Gas imports in the main consuming regions are significantly lower in the APS compared with the RS © OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

Key Policies for CO2 Reduction 42 Increased nuclear (10%) Increased renewables (12%) Power sector efficiency & fuel (13%) Electricity end-use efficiency (29%)

38 Gt of CO2

Reference Scenario

Fossil-fuel end-use efficiency (36%)

34

Alternative Policy Scenario

30

26 2004

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

Improved end-use efficiency accounts for over two-thirds of avoided emissions in 2030 in the APS © OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario :

Key policies that Make a Global Difference Energy efficiency US

z Tighter CAFE standards z Improved efficiency in residential & commercial sectors

EU

z Increased vehicle fuel economy z Improved efficiency in electricity use in the commercial sector

China

z Improved efficiency in electricity use in industry z Improved efficiency in electricity use in the residential sector

Power generation z Increased use of renewables z Increased use of renewables z Nuclear plant lifetime extensions z Increased efficiency of coal-fired plants z Increased use of renewables z Increased reliance on nuclear

A dozen policies in the US, EU & China account for around 40% of the global emissions reduction in 2030 in the Alternative Policy Scenario © OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

Cost Effectiveness of Policies z Total energy investment – from production to consumption – is lower than in the RS z Consumers spend $2.4 trillion more in 2005-2030 in more efficient cars, refrigerators etc z ..but $3 trillion less investment is required on the supply side ¾ Each $1 invested in more efficient electrical appliances saves

$2.2 in investment in power plants & networks ¾ Each $1 invested in more efficient oil-consuming equipment

(mainly cars) saves $2.4 in oil imports to 2030 z The higher initial investment by consumers is more than offset by fuel-cost savings

© OECD/IEA - 2006

Alternative Policy Scenario:

Investment Payback Periods 9 OECD

8

Non-OECD

7

years

6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2005-2015

2016-2030

2005-2015

2016-2030

Cars Electrical equipment (refrigerators, washing machines, lighting, air conditioning) Motors in industy

The payback periods of new policies are very short, especially in non-OECD countries for policies introduced before 2015 © OECD/IEA - 2006

Renewed Interest in Nuclear Power z Growing concerns over energy security, surging fossil-fuel prices & rising carbon emissions z Positive aspects of nuclear power ‰ proven technology for large-scale baseload electricity

generation ‰ reduce dependence on imported gas ‰ no emissions of greenhouse gases or local pollutants ‰ produces electricity at competitive & stable cost ‰ uranium resources abundant & widespread

z But governments need to play a stronger role in facilitating investment where nuclear is accepted © OECD/IEA - 2006

Impact of a 50% Increase in Fuel Price on Generating Costs

increase in generating cost

40%

30%

20%

10%

0% Wind

Nuclear

IGCC

Coal steam

CCGT

Nuclear generating costs are far less sensitive to fuel price increases than gas or coal plants © OECD/IEA - 2006

Outlook for Biofuels z Interest in biofuels is soaring z Biofuels can help address growing energy security & climate change threats by: ‰ Increasing diversity of geographic & fuel sources ‰ Lowering greenhouse-gas emissions - depending on how

they are produced

z Higher oil prices have made biofuels more competitive, but further cost reductions are needed z Availability of arable land will constrain biofuels potential medium term z Long-term prospects hinge on new technology © OECD/IEA - 2006

Share of Biofuels in Road-Transport Fuel Consumption 32% 28% 24% 20% 16% 12% 8% 4% 0% World 2004

United States European Union

2030 Reference Scenario

Brazil

2030 Alternative Policy Scenario

Biofuels are set to play a much larger role in meeting world roadtransport fuel demand © OECD/IEA - 2006

Global CO2 Emissions 2003 -2050, Baseline, ACT and TECH plus Scenarios Mt CO2 60 000

+137%

ACT Scenarios 2050

50 000

Other Buildings

40 000

Transport

+21%

30 000

Industry

+27%

Transformation

+6% -16%

20 000

Power Generation

10 000

0 2003

Baseline Baseline 2030 2050

Map

No CCS

Low TECH Plus Efficiency 2050

For a truly sustainable energy system, technological breakthroughs will also be needed © OECD/IEA - 2006

Oil Self-Sufficiency in Brazil

barrels per thousand dollars of GDP*

0.6

Domestic crude production more than triples in the first half of the 1980s

0.5 0.4

Increase in domestic crude production and slowdown in demand growth

0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 -0.2 1970

Self-sufficiency achieved

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

Brazil will remain self-sufficient as long as necessary upstream investments are forthcoming © OECD/IEA - 2006

Summing Up z On current trends, we are on course for an unstable, dirty & expensive energy future z In response, urgent government policy action is required in two key areas: ¾ Promoting energy investment ¾ Promoting energy efficiency z In addition to improving energy security and the environment, these policies also make economic sense z The WEO sets out the essential first steps on a path towards a clean, clever and competitive energy future z For a truly sustainable energy system, technological breakthroughs will also be needed © OECD/IEA - 2006