Deccan Chronicle

Gas to overtake coal as second most used fuel

■ Global demand for natural gas to increase 1.6% a year till 2040, says IEA

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London, Nov. 13: Natural gas is expected to overtake coal as the world’s second largest energy source after oil by 2030 due to a drive to cut air pollution and the rise in liquefied natural gas (LNG) use, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said on Tuesday.

The Paris-based IEA said in its World Energy Outlook 2018 that energy demand would grow by more than a quarter between 2017 and 2040 assuming more efficient use of energy — but would rise by twice that much without such improvemen­ts.

Global gas demand would increase by 1.6 per cent a year to 2040 and would be 45 per cent higher by then than today, it said.

The estimates are based on the IEA’s New Policies Scenario that takes into account legislatio­n and policies to reduce emissions and fight climate change. They also assume more energy efficienci­es in fuel use, buildings and other factors.

“Natural gas is the fastest growing fossil fuel in the New Policies Scenario, overtaking coal by 2030 to become the second-largest source of energy after oil,” the report said.

China, already the world’s biggest oil and coal importer, would soon become the largest importer of gas and net imports would approach the level of the European Union by 2040, the IEA said.

According to Reuters calculatio­ns, based on China’s General Administra­tion of Customs data, China has already overtaken Japan as the world’s top natural gas importer.

Although China is the world’s third-biggest user of natural gas behind the US and Russia, it has to import about 40 percent of its needs as local production cannot keep pace.

Emerging economies in Asia would account for about half of total global gas demand growth and their share of LNG imports would double to 60 percent by 2040, the IEA report said. “Although talk of a global gas market similar to that of oil is premature, LNG trade has expanded substantia­lly in volume since 2010 and has reached previously isolated markets,” it said. LNG involves cooling gas to a liquid so it can transporte­d by ship. The US could account for 40 per cent of total gas output growth to 2025, the IEA said, while other sources would take over as US shale gas output flattened and other nations started turning to unconventi­onal methods of gas production, such as hydraulic fracturing or fracking. — Reuters

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