Global Energy Demand Seen Up 44 Percent By 2030
http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/05/27/us-eia-global-demand-idUSN2719528620090527
Global energy
demand is expected to soar 44 percent over the next two decades with
most of the demand coming from developing countries such as China and Russia, the U.S. government's top energy forecasting agency said on Wednesday.
The worldwide economic downturn
has hit energy consumption, but an expected recovery next year could
respark demand and boost prices, the Energy Information Administration
said in its new forecast.
U.S. oil prices are forecast to rise from an average $61 barrel this year to $110 in 2015 and $130 in 2030.
Oil
prices "begin to rise in 2010-2011 period as the economy rebounds and
global demand once again grows more rapidly than non-OPEC liquid
supply," EIA acting administrator Howard Gruenspecht told a news
conference.
Global oil demand is
expected to rise to 107 million barrels per day over the next two
decades from nearly 84 million bpd this year. Oil will account for 32
percent of the world's energy supply by 2030 from about 36 percent in
2006.
Almost 75 percent of the rise
in global energy demand through 2030 will occur in developing
countries, particularly China, India, Russia and Brazil, the agency said.
The
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will continue to provide
40 percent of the world's oil supplies during the period.
Renewable
energy, like wind and solar power, will be the fastest growing energy
source, making up 11 percent of global supplies. Biofuels, including
ethanol and biodiesel, are expected to reach 5.9 million bpd by 2030.
The
EIA said its long-term forecast does not reflect efforts the United
States may take to cut greenhouse gas emissions or an expected
international agreement to curb greenhouse gases.
Gruenspecht
said the agency will analyze the possible impact of climate change
legislation approved last week by the U.S. House of Representatives
Energy and Commerce Committee.
But
he said the bill may not change energy use initially, citing carbon
dioxide emission limits and the allowed transfer of carbon cuts to
developing countries.
"One could
imagine that one could comply at least with the 2020 part of this
proposal calling for a 17 percent reduction (from 2005 levels) just
using the offsets and not having a significant change in our consumption
or the way we use energy at all," Gruenspecht said.
If
global climate change laws and policies don't change, world
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions will rise by a third to 40
billion metric tons a year, the agency said.
The
EIA's report also found that global natural gas demand will increase by
almost 50 percent to 153 trillion cubic feet. The agency said that
unconventional natural gas production, particularly from gas shale, will
make the United States "virtually self sufficient in natural gas supply
in 2030."
The EIA's forecast also predicts that in 2030:
*
World production of unconventional petroleum resources, including oil
sands, extra-heavy oil and coal-to-liquids, will quadruple to 13.4
million bpd, representing 13 percent of total global petroleum supplies.
* Iraq's crude oil production will jump from 2 million bpd to 5 million bpd.
* China's electricity generation from coal-fired power plants will triple.
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