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Russia-Ukraine conflict to accelerate transition to renewable energy, BP says

▶ Company reduces its oil and gas demand forecast for 2035 amid push towards tighter climate policies

- JOHN BENNY

Russia’s military offensive in Ukraine will affect long-term energy demand and accelerate the shift to renewable energy as countries boost domestic supplies, oil company BP has said.

The conflict will slow global economic activity by about 3 per cent by 2035, compared with BP’s previous forecast, as a result of commodity price shocks, the company said in its 2023 Energy Outlook.

BP reduced its 2035 oil and gas demand forecast by 5 per cent and 6 per cent, respective­ly, under its New Momentum scenario, which is based on current global energy transition plans.

These effects are most concentrat­ed in emerging Asia and the EU, both of which currently have significan­t reliance on oil and natural gas imports, said BP.

“The increased focus on energy security triggered by concerns about energy shortages and vulnerabil­ity to geopolitic­al events is assumed to cause countries and regions to strive to reduce their dependency on imported energy and instead consume more domestical­ly produced energy,” said Spencer Dale, BP’s chief economist.

“It also gives greater incentive to improve energy efficiency, reducing the need for all types of energy.”

In the scenarios where government­s significan­tly tighten climate policies, oil is still expected to play a “major role”

over the next decade with global demand reaching 70 million to 80 million barrels per day in 2035, compared with about 100 million bpd currently, said BP.

The consumptio­n of fossil fuels declines in all three scenarios over the outlook.

“This would be the first time in modern history that there has been a sustained fall in the demand for any fossil fuel.”

Meanwhile, the share of renewables in the global primary energy system is projected to

increase between 35 per cent and 65 per cent by 2050, compared with 10 per cent in 2019, driven by falling costs and government policies.

Last year, the US passed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which offers a series of tax incentives on wind, solar, hydropower and other renewables as well as a push towards electric vehicle ownership.

The shift in policy will result in a more than fourfold increase in solar and wind deployment in the US by 2030,

from 2019 levels, said BP. The demand for hydrogen will increase to 4 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) in 2030 and 26mtpa in 2050, the report

said. Hydrogen incentives under the IRA are supportive of green hydrogen, which is expected to account for about 60 per cent of US low-carbon hydrogen in 2050, compared with the previous forecast of about 25 per cent.

“The IRA has significan­t implicatio­ns for the US and potentiall­y for the rest of the world, but it also serves to highlight the scale of policy support likely to be necessary to achieve … faster [and] deep, decarbonis­ation pathways

The share of renewables in the global energy system is projected to increase between 35% and 65% by 2050

consistent with meeting the Paris goals,” Mr Dale said during an online seminar.

The global energy crisis sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could hasten the transition to renewable energy, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in its World Energy Outlook last year.

Investment in renewable energy needs to double to more than $4 trillion by the end of the decade to meet net-zero emissions targets by 2050, the agency said.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Iberdola’s green hydrogen plant in Puertollan­o, Spain. Green hydrogen is expected to account for about 60 per cent of US low-carbon hydrogen in 2050
Bloomberg Iberdola’s green hydrogen plant in Puertollan­o, Spain. Green hydrogen is expected to account for about 60 per cent of US low-carbon hydrogen in 2050

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