Power Shortage Risks by 2015, Ofgem Warns: "Consumers Need Protection From Price Spikes As Well As Power Cuts."
This document summarizes projections for future global energy demand and supply from the U.S. Energy Information Administration's International Energy Outlook 2013. It finds that energy use will increase significantly in developing non-OECD countries like China and India between now and 2040, driven by economic and population growth. Fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal will continue to dominate global energy supply, but renewables and nuclear will be the fastest growing sources of world energy over this period.
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Power Shortage Risks by 2015, Ofgem Warns: "Consumers Need Protection From Price Spikes As Well As Power Cuts."
This document summarizes projections for future global energy demand and supply from the U.S. Energy Information Administration's International Energy Outlook 2013. It finds that energy use will increase significantly in developing non-OECD countries like China and India between now and 2040, driven by economic and population growth. Fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal will continue to dominate global energy supply, but renewables and nuclear will be the fastest growing sources of world energy over this period.
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Power shortage risks by 2015, Ofgem warns
"Consumers need protection from price spikes as well as power cuts." December 3, 2013 Future world energy demand driven by trends in developing countries
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, International Energy Outlook 2013
EIA's International Energy Outlook 2013 (IEO2013) projects that growth in world energy use largely comes from countries outside of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Energy use patterns for countries inside the OECD are relatively stable between 2010 and 2040 as primary energy use is projected to grow by 0.5% per year, roughly the same rate as population growth in those countries. In non- OECD countries, faster growing economies and changing habits in highly concentrated populations drive significant increases in energy use.
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Energy use in non-OECD countries is projected to grow by 2.2% per year, and the share of non-OECD energy use is expected to rise from 54% of total world energy use in 2010 to 65% in 2040. Between 2010 and 2040, IEO2013 shows that primary energy use per capita is expected to change little from its 2010 level of 196 million British thermal units (MMBtu) in the OECD but grows from 50 MMBtu to 73 MMBtu per capita in non-OECD countries. India's energy use per capita is expected to grow during the period.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, International Energy Outlook 2013
In 2040, the total gross domestic product (GDP), measured in purchasing power parity (PPP), of non-OECD countries is projected to be much higher than the GDP of OECD countries, but the amount of energy used per unit of GDP is virtually the same. At the same time, the ratio of GDP relative to population remains much higher in OECD countries. This higher GDP-to-population ratio allows citizens in OECD countries to spend more resources on energy-consuming services that provide
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productivity, leisure, and comfort, and keeps energy consumption on a per capita basis much higher in the OECD. As the economies in the non-OECD countries continue to experience relatively fast growth, those countries will also be able to spend more for energy-consuming services. Power to the People: The World Outlook for Electricity Investment Electricity blackouts made news in Europe and North America not long ago. Behind the headlines, too much of the world lives with blackouts everyday. About one in four people still have no electricity. How much will it cost to bring the needed power to more people? Energy analysts are looking at the pace and price of progress - at a time when electricity demand is rising ever higher. Total investment required for the energy-supply infrastructure worldwide over the period 2001-2030 is expected to amount to $16 trillion, or $550 billion a year. This investment is needed to replace existing and future supply facilities that will be exhausted or become obsolete during the projection period, as well as to expand supply capacity to meet projected primary energy demand growth of 1.7% per year. Electricity Market Trends World electricity demand is projected to double between 2000 and 2030, growing at an annual rate of 2.4% (see Table 1). This is faster than any other final energy source. Electricity's share of total final energy consumption rises from 18% in 2000 to 22% in 2030. Electricity demand growth is strongest in developing countries, where demand will climb by over 4% per year over the projection period, more than tripling by 2030. Consequently, the developing countries' share of global electricity demand jumps from 27% in 2000 to 43% in 2030.
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The next three decades will see a pronounced shift in the generation-fuel mix in favour of gas and away from coal - the most widely used fuel today worldwide. The role of nuclear power is also expected to decline markedly, because few reactors will be built and some existing ones will be retired. Nuclear production is projected to peak at the end of this decade and then decline gradually. Its share of global power generation will, therefore, drop sharply from around
Power Sector Investment Needs To meet the expected growth in electricity demand through 2030, cumulative investment of $10 trillion in power-sector infrastructure will be needed - equivalent to 60% of total energy-sector investment. If the investments in the oil, gas and coal industries that are needed to supply fuel to power stations are included, this share reaches more than 70% and total power-sector investment over $11 trillion. That is nearly three times higher in real terms than during the past thirty years. As demand for electricity increases, investment needs will gradually rise, from $2.6 trillion in the current decade to $3.9 trillion in 2021-2030. The power sector in developing countries will require more than half of the global investment, exceeding $5 trillion. Two-thirds must flow into developing Asia. China's investment needs will be the largest in the world, approaching $2.
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India will need investment close to $700 billion, while East Asia and Latin America each will need investments approaching $800 billion. The electricity industry in OECD countries will need investment of around $4 trillion, while that in the transition economies will need $700 billion of investment, more than half of it in Russia. Generation is the largest single component of total power infrastructure investment. Investment in new plants over the next thirty years will be more than $4 trillion, accounting for 41% of the total. Most of this investment will go into the development of gas and coal-fired power plants.
In OECD countries, where networks are more developed, most network investment will be needed for refurbishment and replacement of existing equipment. In the European Union, as in the rest of the OECD, investment in new power stations to replace those built in the 1970s and 1980s will need to rise in the coming years (see Figure 3). In developing countries, priority is often given to investment in generation, but a growing share of capital will need to go to transmission and distribution in the future.
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INTERNATIONAL ENERGY OUTLOOK 2013 World energy demand and economic outlook Overview In the IEO2013 Reference case, world energy consumption increases from 524 quadrillion Btu in 2010 to 630 quadrillion Btu in 2020 and 820 quadrillion Btu in 2040, a 30-year increase of 56 percent. More than 85 percent of the increase in global energy demand from 2010 to 2040 occurs among the developing nations outside the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (non-OECD), driven by strong economic growth and expanding populations. In contrast, OECD member countries are, for the most part, already more mature energy consumers, with slower anticipated economic growth and little or no anticipated population growth. 7
In contrast to the OECD nations, developing non-OECD economies, particularly in non- OECD Asia, have led the global recovery from the 2008-2009 recession.
China and India have been among the world's fastest growing economies for the past two decades.
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From 1990 to 2010, China's economy grew by an average of 10.4 percent per year and India's by 6.4 percent per year. Although the two countries' economic growth remained strong through the global recession, both slowed in 2012 to rates much lower than analysts had predicted at the start of the year.
In 2012, real GDP in China increased by 7.2 percent, its lowest annual growth rate in 20 years. India's real GDP growth slowed to 5.5 percent in 2012.
Even with slower than average growth in China and India in the short-term, medium- and long-term prospects for the two nations are good.
Since 1990, energy consumption in both countries as a share of total world energy use has increased significantly; together, they accounted for about 10 percent of total world energy consumption in 1990 and nearly 24 percent in 2010. From 2010 to 2040, their combined energy use more than doubles in the Reference case, and they account for 34 percent of projected total world energy consumption in 2040. China, which recently became the world's largest energy consumer, is projected to consume more than twice as much energy as the United States in 2040 (Figure 13).
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Outlook for world energy consumption by source Liquids consumption increases at an average annual rate of 0.9 percent from 2010 to 2040, whereas total energy demand increases by 1.5 percent per year. Nuclear power and renewables are the fastest-growing sources of world energy, both increasing at an average annual rate of 2.5 percent. Concerns about energy security, the impact of fossil fuel emissions on the environment, and sustained high world oil prices support
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expanded use of nuclear power and renewable energy over the projection. Government policies and incentives improve the prospects for non-fossil forms of energy in many countries around the world in the outlook.
In 2040, liquid fuels, natural gas, and coal still supply more than three-fourths of total world energy consumption. Petroleum and other liquid fuels remain the largest source of energy, but their share of world marketed energy consumption declines from 34 percent in 2010 to 28 percent in 2040.
On a worldwide basis, liquids consumption increases only in the industrial and transportation sectors while declining in the buildings and electric power sectors. The decrease in the use of liquid fuels in the residential, commercial, and power sectors is a result of rising world oil prices, which result in switching from liquids to alternative fuels where possible. In contrast, the use of liquids in the transportation sector continues to increase despite rising prices. World liquids consumption for transportation grows by 1.1 percent per year from 2010 to 2040 and accounts for 63 percent of the total projected net increment in liquid fuel use. The industrial sector accounts for the remainder of the increase, growing by 1.2 percent per year over the course of the projection.
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In the IEO2013 Reference case, the world's total natural gas consumption increases by 1.7 percent per year on average, from 113 trillion cubic feet in 2010 to 132 trillion cubic feet in 2020 and 185 trillion cubic feet in 2040.
Increasing supplies of natural gas, particularly from shale formations in the United States and Canada, and eventually elsewhere as well, help to supply global markets. A substantial portion of China's future natural gas production is projected to come from tight gas, shale gas, and coal bed methane.
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Worldwide, hydroelectricity and wind are the two largest contributors to the increase in global renewable electricity generation, with hydropower accounting for 52 percent of the total increment and wind 28 percent. The mix of the two renewable energy sources differs dramatically between the OECD and non-OECD regions. In OECD nations, most economically exploitable hydroelectric resources already have been developed. Except in a few casesnotably, Canada and Turkeythere are few opportunities to expand large-scale hydroelectric power projects. Instead, most renewable energy growth in OECD countries is expected to come from non-hydro-electric sources, especially wind.