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Rising demand signals US oil, gas resurgence

- /AP

Oil will continue growing as a source of energy for over two decades, with the US set to become the undisputed leader in crude and gas production, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said Tuesday.

The report from the Paris-based agency will come as grim news for officials attending global climate talks in Bonn, Germany, as they grapple with ways to contain carbon emissions. Scientists just this week said that emissions of the heat-trapping gas rose this year after three years of not growing.

The IEA said oil production will be driven by continued growth in energy-hungry industries. Though solar power is set to become the cheapest source of new electricit­y generation and the boom years for coal are over, oil and gas will continue to meet the bulk of the world’s energy needs, the IEA said.

Oil demand is forecast to keep rising until 2040, with natural gas growing by a sharp 40 percent.

Much of it in Asia

A more widespread use of electric cars will not be enough to consign oil to the past, said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol.

“It is far too early to write the obituary of oil, as growth for trucks, aviation, petrochemi­cals,

Taking 2018 as a whole, oil demand and non-OPEC production will grow by roughly the same volume and it is this current outlook that might act as the ceiling for aspiration­s of higher oil prices. Leading oil producers will have looked at their market balances and probably drawn the same conclusion. Internatio­nal Energy Agency

shipping and aviation keep pushing demand higher,” said Birol.

Total energy demand is expected to have grown by 30 percent by 2040 — and would be growing twice that without efforts to improve energy efficienci­es.

The price of oil has risen over 30 percent since June to a two-year high of around $57 a barrel in New York trading amid evidence of stronger economic growth around the world. But analysts expect the price to not rise much further in coming months as the US ramps up production.

The IEA echoed that view, saying it expects the U.S. to see a resurgence in its oil and gas industries and become the world’s biggest net exporter by the end of the 2020s.

Asian countries will become the biggest net importers of oil and gas, taking in 70 percent of imports by 2040 as their economies expand at a fast clip.

Environmen­tal activists decried the IEA forecasts as discountin­g any efforts by countries to limit emissions as part of the Paris Agreement on climate change.

“None of its core scenarios for the future of energy provide a reasonable chance that the world will avoid climate catastroph­e,” said Adam Scott, senior advisor at Oil Change Internatio­nal.

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