IEA downbeat on pace of energy transition

  • : Chemicals, Crude oil, Electricity, Emissions, Hydrogen, Natural gas, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 21/10/13

The world's progress on low-carbon energy is "far too slow to put global emissions into sustained decline towards net zero", the IEA said today to mark the launch of its World Energy Outlook 2021 (WEO).

Although the report recognises that "a new energy economy" is emerging "as solar, wind, electric vehicles and other low-carbon technologies flourish", it also notes that strong growth in global coal demand this year is pushing CO2 emissions towards their second-largest annual increase in history.

"The world's hugely encouraging clean energy momentum is running up against the stubborn incumbency of fossil fuels in our energy systems," IEA executive director Fatih Birol said. Birol calls on governments to resolve the problem at next month's UN Cop 26 climate conference by giving a clear signal that they are committed to rapidly scaling up the clean technologies of the future.

The WEO examines three scenarios, each outlining potential paths for energy supply and demand over the next 30 years. In addition to the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) scenario, which was published in May, the report explores the Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS), which is based on existing energy and climate measures as well as policy initiatives under development, and the Announced Pledges Scenario (APS), which assumes all of the net zero emissions pledges announced by governments so far are fully implemented on time.

In all three, peak oil demand arrives at various points before 2050. "For the first time in a WEO, oil demand goes into eventual decline in all the scenarios examined, although the timing and speed of the drop vary widely," the IEA said. In the STEPS, oil demand peaks at 104mn b/d in the mid-2030s and then declines very gradually to 2050. In the APS, consumption peaks soon after 2025 at 97mn b/d and falls to 77mn b/d in 2050. In the NZE, demand has already peaked and drops to 72mn b/d in 2030 and just 24mn b/d by 2050.

Demand for natural gas increases in all three scenarios over the next five years. "But there are sharp divergences after this," the WEO said. "The share of natural gas in the global energy mix remains around 25pc to 2050 in the STEPS, while it falls to 20pc in the APS and to 11pc in the NZE. Around 70pc of natural gas use in 2050 in the NZE is equipped with carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS)."

The IEA reiterates that in the NZE, no new oil and gas fields are needed beyond those already approved for development. One of the key reasons is a rapid rise in the use of low-emissions fuels, such as green hydrogen, alongside greater efficiency and electrification. But it warns that actual deployment of low-emissions fuels "is well off track". The current pipeline of planned low-carbon hydrogen projects falls short of the levels of use in 2030 assumed in the APS and even further short of the amounts required in the NZE, it said.

Clean path

To put the world on a path towards net zero emissions by 2050, the IEA says investment in clean energy projects and infrastructure needs to more than triple over this decade, to nearly $4 trillion/yr by 2030. And according to Birol, "some 70pc of that additional spending needs to happen in emerging and developing economies, where financing is scarce and capital remains up to seven times more expensive than in advanced economies".

The IEA suggests that there are four solutions available to close the gap over the next 10 years between today's climate pledges and the emissions reductions required to limit the increase in global temperatures to 1.5°C compared with pre-industrial levels. These include a "relentless focus on energy efficiency", a broad drive to cut methane emissions from fossil fuel operations, and a major boost to clean energy innovation.

The WEO also calls for "a massive additional push for clean electrification". This would involve, among other things, a doubling of solar and wind power capacity compared with what has already been pledged, a major expansion of other low-emissions power generation, and a rapid phase out of coal.


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24/05/03

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL

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UN carbon market enshrines appeal, grievance processes


24/05/03
24/05/03

UN carbon market enshrines appeal, grievance processes

Berlin, 3 May (Argus) — The much-debated procedure for appeal and grievance processes for people negatively affected by carbon mitigation activities was finally passed this week by the regulator of the future UN carbon market. The supervisory body of the Paris agreement crediting mechanism, under Article 6.4 of the Paris climate agreement, called the appeal and grievance procedure a "crucial step towards developing a new international carbon market that sets the benchmark for high integrity carbon credits". The mechanism is expected to be passed at the UN climate summit Cop 29 in November in Azerbaijan. The appeal and grievance procedure sets the fee for filing an appeal at $30,000, compared with the $5,000 fee suggested in earlier iterations, which was seen by some supervisory body members at this week's meeting in Bonn, Germany, as "too low for project developers, but too high for vulnerable groups". The fee will be waived for appellants who are appealing for vulnerable groups, such as local communities and indigenous peoples. But the supervisory body failed to pass the mechanism's long-awaited sustainable development tool, instead launching a call for input. Members had criticised the lack of a validation and verification process for the tool, and its unclear delimitations, given that some of its objectives will be addressed in future rules on carbon removals activities or the carbon reduction methodologies under the mechanism. Making the tool mandatory was demanded by both countries and non-governmental organisations at recent Cop summits, with the lack of a grievance process and sustainable development tool part of the reason why the pricing mechanism was not finalised at Cop 28 in Dubai last year. The sustainable development tool of the Kyoto Protocol's clean development mechanism (CDM), which the new mechanism broadly aims to replace, was never made mandatory. A total of 1,796 carbon mitigation activities have now requested to transition from the CDM to the new mechanism, of which more than 300 have not yet provided full details and could miss the 31 August deadline, the UN's climate arm said in Bonn. The supervisory body called for an extension of the transition period to 4 November. Work on the new mechanism's registry is also advancing, with the supervisory body agreeing to launch a consultation on the "legal, technical and financial implications of providing functionality for the treatment of financial security interests in Article 6.4 emissions reductions within the mechanism registry". By Chloe Jardine Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US job growth nearly halved in April: Update


24/05/03
24/05/03

US job growth nearly halved in April: Update

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Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan


24/05/03
24/05/03

Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan

London, 3 May (Argus) — Opec+ member Kazakhstan has submitted a plan to Opec detailing how it intends to compensate for producing above its crude production target in the first four months of the year. Kazakhstan and Iraq — which has also submitted a compensation plan — are the Opec+ alliance's largest overproducers and a key reason why the group exceeded its overall production in the first three months of the year . Kazakhstan's energy ministry said it produced above its target by 129,000 b/d in January, 128,000 b/d in February, and 131,000 b/d in March, according to secondary source estimates. Opec secondary sources, of which Argus is one, have yet to formally submit their production estimates for April, but Kazakhstan said it is factoring preliminarily overproduction of 100,000 b/d for April. The ministry said it kept oil production high because of high winter demand for natural gas — much of its gas production is associated and is produced alongside its oil. Kazakhstan said it would start its compensation plan in May with an initial cut of 18,000 b/d below its official target of 1.468mn b/d. It would then stick to its target in June and July before implementing a cut of 131,000 b/d in August, none in September, 299,000 b/d in October, 40,000 b/d in November and zero in December. The cuts have been designed to coincide with scheduled maintenance at the country's key oil fields of Kashagan and Tengiz, the ministry said. Kazakhstan would have to reduce its output by 149,000 b/d in May compared with its March production of 1.599mn b/d to meet its pledge, according to Argus calculations. The compensation plan is set to be adjusted once a final figure for April is available. The plan would be further adjusted to accommodate any change in the Opec+ alliance's output policy — for which a meeting is scheduled to take place on 1 June in Vienna. Opec has been increasing pressure on members exceeding their targets. It called last month on countries that have overproduced to submit detailed compensation plans by the end of April. The Opec+ alliance has implemented a series of cuts — voluntary or collective — worth a combined 5.4mn b/d since October 2022 in a self-described bid to "support the stability and balance of the oil market". The latest round of "voluntary" output reductions by several members came into force in January and is due to run until the end of June. By Aydin Calik and Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output


24/05/03
24/05/03

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output

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