The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Global energy system under stress

-

PARIS: With fossil fuels set to meet most of the increased global demand for energy, the IEA warned yesterday that climate change targets are at risk and conflicts could still wreak havoc with supplies.

“The global energy system is in danger of falling short of the hopes and expectatio­ns placed upon it,” the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in its World Energy Outlook 2014 report.

The Paris-based body, which advises industrial oil consuming nations, forecasted global energy demand will grow 37 per cent by 2040, with fossil fuels key to meeting that increased demand despite concerns about global warming.

It warned global energy security is at risk in the oil market as “reliance grows on a relatively small number of producers.”

It noted that the Middle East “remains the only large source of low-cost oil”, but conf lict in the region “has rarely been greater since the oil shocks in the 1970s” that left consuming countries desperatel­y short of fuel supplies.

While oil prices are currently at four-year lows, it sees them rising as demand increases from 90 million barrels per day in 2013 to 104 mbd in 2040.

It added that higher prices and new policies will gradually constrain the pace of their consumptio­n and reduce their weight in overall energy use.

That view is shared by top oil producers.

Last week the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) predicted that fossil fuels – oil, gas, coal – will still “play the leading role in satisfying world energy needs” but will dip from 81.6 per cent to 78.4 per cent of total energy consumptio­n.

The IAE sees the fastest rate of growth among fossil fuels for natural gas, where demand should increase by more than half, becoming the leading fuel in the OECD energy mix by 2030.

The dispute between Russia and Ukraine over a separatist insurgency in the east of the ex-Soviet country has reignited concerns about gas security, especially for European markets.

The IEA noted those fears but said they were partly allayed by a growing number of suppliers, and that the alternativ­e of “liquefied natural gas (LNG) offers some protection against the risk of supply disruption­s”.

As for coal, while the supply is abundant and secure, “its future use is constraine­d by measures to tackle pollution and reduce CO2 emissions,” it said.

While the share of fossil fuels in energy consumptio­n will drop to just under three quarters by 2040, their impact on global warming and climate change is undiminish­ed.

The IEA called for urgent action as it estimates the world is currently set to emit by 2040 the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that would bust the internatio­nal goal of limiting the global temperatur­e increase to 2 degrees C.

“It is clear that the 2 degrees C objective requires urgent action to steer the energy system on a safer path,” said the IEA, which plans to issue a special report in advance of a crucial UN climate summit in Paris next year.

While a major alternativ­e to fossil fuels, the IAE sees an uncertain future for nuclear power as Japan and a number of European countries reduce or phase it out over safety concerns.

Global nuclear capacity will neverthele­ss increase by almost 60 per cent, with China alone accounting for 45 per cent of the growth.

But this will only increase its share in the energy mix by one point to 12 per cent, still below its peak two decades ago.

It pointed to renewable energy technologi­es to help fill the shortfall in power generation as they are gaining ground, helped by global subsidies amounting to 120 billion in 2013.

The share of renewables – wind, solar, hydropower, biofuels – increases most in the OECD major industrial­ised nations, reaching 37 per cent of power generation, the IEA said. — AFP

 ??  ?? SEARCH FOR ALTERNATIV­E ENERGY: A worker cuts in a small factory producing solid fuel boilers for heating and wood stoves in Brovary, near Kiev on Tuesday. Months of dispute with Russia on gas prices raise fears on stable gas supply to Ukraine this...
SEARCH FOR ALTERNATIV­E ENERGY: A worker cuts in a small factory producing solid fuel boilers for heating and wood stoves in Brovary, near Kiev on Tuesday. Months of dispute with Russia on gas prices raise fears on stable gas supply to Ukraine this...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia