IEA and SKOLKOVO Conduct Joint Presentation at World Energy Outlook
OREANDA-NEWS. November 25, 2011. The International Energy Agency and SKOLKOVO Energy Centre have given
This year, IEA research concerned
Regarding the future of global energy, the IEA experts’ main conclusion can be summarised as follows: the world is locked into its current developmental trajectory, which is heading for an unstable and unsustainable energy future. “Growth, prosperity, and a rising population will inevitably raise energy needs over the coming decades. But we cannot further rely on insecure and environmentally unsustainable consumption of energy,” Maria van der Hoeven said.
IEA experts believe that
Grigory Vygon said: “Due to increasing competitiveness in the traditional, external markets, it is essential for
Another partial solution suggested by IEA experts to solve the problem of energy security would be to raise
The IEA’s key conclusions were as follows:
In the New Strategies Scenario (the WEO Central Scenario), which assumes the government’s recent commitments will be pursued cautiously, primary energy sources demand will increase by a third between 2010 and 2035, and 90% of this growth will occur in non-OECD countries.
Fossil fuels account for a slightly decreasing proportion of all primary energy sources consumed globally, predicted to fall from 81% today to 75% in 2035. The percentage of renewable energy in the fuel-energy mix is forecast to increase from the 13% currently to 18% in 2035. That growth is supported by subsidies, which will increase from USD 64 billion in 2010 to USD 250 billion in 2035. This support, however, cannot be taken for granted in an era of great fiscal austerity. By comparison, in 2010, USD 409 billion was spent on subsidising fossil fuels.
The temporary pressure on the oil markets is easing due to slower economic growth and the expected re-emergence of Libyan crude on the market. However, the estimated average price of oil will remain high, nearing USD
Consumption of coal, which has accounted for almost half of the growth in global demand for energy sources in recent decades, will increase by 65% by 2035. The future of coal is heavily dependent on energy policy, particularly in
The events at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant raised doubts about the future of nuclear energy. In the New Strategies Scenario, the share of nuclear energy is forecast to grow only slightly more slowly than was predicted last year, because most countries with nuclear energy development programmes have confirmed that they intend to continue these programmes. However, that situation may change because of the uncertainty in this issue. The Low Nuclear Case special research examines what would happen if the anticipated investments in the nuclear sector of the energy supply were cut by 50%. Although this would mean a more favourable climate for renewable energy sources, such a reduction in investment would create more expensive energy imports, which would heighten concerns about energy security, as well as complicate the battle against climate change and increase the associated costs.
The share of coal in the fuel-energy mix is increasing. Consumption of natural gas will be almost equal to that of coal.
In the New Strategies Scenario, total CO2 emissions in the next 25 years will be equal to three quarters of that in the last 110 years. Continuing on this course will lead to long-term increases of an average of more than 3.5 degrees Celsius in temperature. Unless we develop a new strategy, we will find ourselves on an even more dangerous path, leading to temperature increases of six degrees or more. Scenario 450, which was presented at WEO, examines opportunities for developing energy systems that are aimed at achieving the internationally accepted goals of limiting the long-term increase in the average global temperature to just 2 degrees. Four fifths of the total allowable CO2 emissions associated with energy use in 2035 are already locked into existing fixed assets (electricity plants, buildings, and factories). If decisive measures are not taken by 2017, the energy infrastructure that will be in place at that time will have already reached the cap for CO2 emissions that was established by Scenario 450 through to 2035.
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