International Energy Outlook 2011

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International Energy Outlook 2011

Center for Strategic and International Studies Howard Gruenspecht, Acting Administrator September 19, 2011 | Washington, DC

U.S. Energy Information Administration

Independent Statistics & Analysis

www.eia.gov

Key findings in the IEO2011 Reference case • World energy consumption increases by 53% between 2008 and 2035 with half of the increase attributed to China and India

• Renewables are the world’s fastest-growing energy source, at 2.8% per year; renewables share of world energy grows to roughly 15% in 2035 • Fossil fuels continue to supply almost 80% of world energy use in 2035 • Liquid fuels remain the largest energy source worldwide through 2035, but the oil share of total energy declines to 28% in 2035, as sustained high oil prices dampen demand and encourage fuel switching where possible and modest use of liquid biofuels

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Key findings in the IEO2011 Reference case (continued) • Increasing supplies of unconventional natural gas support growth in projected worldwide gas use. Global natural gas consumption grows by 1.6% per year, and projected natural gas use in 2035 is 8 percent higher than in last year’s outlook • Worldwide energy-related carbon dioxide emissions rise 43 percent between 2008 and 2035, reaching 43.2 billion metric tons in 2035

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Non-OECD nations drive the increase in energy demand world energy consumption quadrillion Btu History 500

2008

Projections 482

400 Non-OECD 300 260

288 OECD

244

200

100

0 1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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China and India account for about half of the world increase in energy use world energy consumption quadrillion Btu History 400 Non-OECD Asia

Projections Other Non-OECD

OECD

300

200

100

0 1990

2000

2008

2015

2025

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Growth in income and population drive rising energy use; energy intensity improvements moderate increases in energy demand average annual change (2008-2035) percent per year 7 6

Energy Intensity

GDP per capita

Population

5

4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2

-3 -4 U.S.

OECD Europe

Japan

South Korea

China

India

Brazil

Middle East

Africa

Russia

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Renewables are the fastest growing source of energy consumption world energy consumption by fuel quadrillion Btu History 250

2008

Projections Liquids (including biofuels)

29% 27%

200 34% 150

Coal

23% Share of world total

28% Natural gas

100

14%

23%

Renewables (excluding biofuels) 10%

50

7% Nuclear

5% 0 1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Liquid fuels markets

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Oil prices in the Reference case rise steadily; the other cases represent a wide range of prices world oil price paths real 2009 dollars per barrel 2009

History

Projections

225 High Oil Price case

200 175 150 125

Reference case

100 75 50

Low Oil Price case

25 0 1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Unconventional liquids become increasingly important in the total supply of liquid fuels world liquids production million barrels per day 2008

History

120

Projections

Unconventional

100

12%

5% 80

OPEC conventional

40%

41%

60

40 Non-OPEC conventional

55%

48%

20 0 1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Growth in OPEC production comes mainly from the Middle East OPEC conventional production million barrels per day 18

2008

2035

16 14 12 10

8 6 4 2 0 Saudi Arabia

Iraq

Iran

Other Middle East OPEC

Africa

South America

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Non-OPEC conventional supply growth comes mainly from Russia, United States, Brazil, and Kazakhstan Non-OPEC conventional production million barrels per day 14

2008

2035

12 10 8

6 4 2 0 Russia

United States

Brazil

Kazakhstan

OECD Europe

Mexico

Canada

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Oil sands/bitumen and biofuels account for 70 percent of the increase in unconventional liquid fuels Unconventional production million barrels per day 6

2008

2035

5

4

3

2

1

0 Oil sands/bitumen

Biofuels

Extra-heavy oil

Coal-to-liquids

Gas-to-liquids

Oil Shale

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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High and Low Oil Price cases reflect shifts in both demand and supply schedules relative to the Reference case worldwide liquids consumption and production in 2035 million barrels per day

80

Reference case

High Price case

Low Price case

60 40 20 0 OECD

Non-OECD Asia Rest of World

Demand

OPEC conventional

Non-OPEC Unconventional conventional

Supply

Source: International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Natural gas markets

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Non-OECD nations account for 76% of the growth in natural gas consumption in the IEO2011 Reference case world natural gas consumption trillion cubic feet History 120 OECD

Projections

Non-OECD 100

100 83 80 66 55 56

60

57

68 62

49 40

37 37

39

20

0 1990

2000

2008

2015

2025

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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The Middle East and non-OECD Asia account for the largest increases in natural gas production world natural gas production increment, 2008-2035 trillion cubic feet

Middle East

15

Non-OECD Asia

12

Non-OECD Europe/Eurasia

10

Africa

7

United States

6

Central and South America

4

Australia/New Zealand

4

Canada Other OECD

3 -2

-5.0

0.0

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Initial assessment of shale gas resources in 48 major shale basins in 32 countries indicates a large potential

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Estimates of technically recoverable shale gas resources in the 48 shale gas basins that were recently assessed Technically Recoverable

Continent

(trillion cubic feet) North America Africa Asia

Canada, Mexico

1,069

Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Mauritania, Western Sahara, South Africa

1,042

China, India, Pakistan

1,404

Australia Europe

South America

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

396 France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, U.K., Poland, Lithuania, Kaliningrad, Ukraine, Turkey Colombia, Venezuela, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay

624

1,225

19

Unconventional gas is an increasingly important component of supply, not only for the U.S., but also China and Canada natural gas production trillion cubic feet 30

20 Unconventional (tight gas, shale gas, and coalbed methane) 10

Conventional (all other gas) 0 2008 2035 China

2008 2035 Canada

2008

2035

United States

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Electricity markets

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Renewables and natural gas are fastest growing, but coal still fuels the largest share of the world’s electricity in 2035 world electricity generation by fuel trillion kilowatthours History

Projections

40

30

Coal

20

Natural gas Nuclear

10

Hydropower Other renewables Liquids

0

1990

2000

2008

2015

2025

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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China accounts for nearly three-quarters of the world increase in coal-fired generation coal-fired generation trillion kilowatthours History

8

United States

China

Projections

Non-OECD Asia (excluding China)

Rest of world

6

4

2

0 1990

2000

2008

2015

2025

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Energy-related carbon dioxide emissions

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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Non-OECD Asia accounts for almost 75% of the world increase in energy-related carbon dioxide emissions world energy-related carbon dioxide emissions billion metric tons History

25 OECD

Projections

Other Non-OECD

Non-OECD Asia

20 15 10 5 0

1990

2000

2008

2015

2025

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

25

Coal continues to account for the largest share of carbon dioxide emissions throughout the projection world energy-related carbon dioxide emissions by fuel billion metric tons History 2008

Projections

50

40

30 Coal

20 Liquids

10 Natural gas

0

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

Source: EIA, International Energy Outlook 2011 Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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For more information U.S. Energy Information Administration home page | www.eia.gov Short-Term Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/steo

Annual Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/aeo International Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/ieo

Monthly Energy Review | www.eia.gov/mer

Howard Gruenspecht CSIS, September 19, 2011

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