China and Its Impact on World Energy Consumption Dan Westbrook.

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China and Its Impact on World Energy Consumption Dan Westbrook

Transcript of China and Its Impact on World Energy Consumption Dan Westbrook.

Page 1: China and Its Impact on World Energy Consumption Dan Westbrook.

China and Its Impact on World Energy Consumption

Dan Westbrook

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Energy Consumption 2004

UKGermanyIndia

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US China Russia Japan India Germany UK

MMBOE

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Energy Consumption vs. World Population

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$GDP*/BOE

World

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$GDP/BOE

* 2004 GDP $PPP

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0

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GDP per capita (PPP, $1995)

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Source: UN and DOE EIA

Energy use grows with economic development

US

Australia

Russia

BrazilChina

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FranceUK Japan

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energy demand and GDP per capita (1980-2002)

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0

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GDP per capita (PPP, $1995)

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Source: UN and DOE EIA

Energy use grows with economic development

US

Australia

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BrazilChina

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Mexico

Ireland

Greece

FranceUK Japan

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energy demand and GDP per capita (1980-2002)

4x GDP / 2X Energy

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Issues Going Forward

• Political unrest / security of supply• Growth in world economy, especially in India

and China (and growth in overall population)• Environmental issues – carbon tax?• Development of new sources of energy

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Thank You

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Backup

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1. ~ 23% of world’s primary energy comes from natural gas, 6% from Hydro, 6% from Nuclear, 28% from Coal, and 36% from oil 1. Oil R/P is ~ 40 (and it has been ~ 40 for the last 10 years, was actually lower prior to that time Gas R/P is ~ 65 (and has been over 60 for the last 20 years) Coal R/P ~ 200 yr1. Today – production is ~ 82 mmbod spare capacity is few % (1 to 1.5 mmbod)2. Early 80’s production was ~ 60 mmbod spare capacity was on the order of 25%3. On a real basis, using CPI as the adjustment, the peak price for oil was in 1979 when it was just Almost $100/bbl7. Average energy growth is just over 2% per year, average oil growth is just under 2% per year. 8. Main drivers for increase in price of oil:

1. Increased consumption – lower spare capacity2. Geopolitical issues (Nigeria, Venezuela, Iraq, Iran 3. Hurricanes in 20054. Oil as a financial instrument

9. World oil reserves have been increasing as far back as you go. Due to improved exploration and Improved recovery10. Carbon emissions up 4.8% in 2004, and 2.9% in 200511. Oil inventories are actually above average since Jan0512. Refining capacity: global distillation usage was 86% in 2005, only 700,000 bod capacity added in 200513. Nuclear power plants: 4 new in 2005, 2 in Japan, 1 in Korea, 1 in India14. Wind produced 0.7% of world’s electricity in 2005. BUT 30% growth / yr over last 10 years. US got 0.4% of electricity from wind15. Only about 20 to 25% of the worlds energy is used for transportation, more in developed countries, Less in developing countries16: Hubbard prediction: somewhere between a few years and 20 (non-open) or 30 years (OPEC)17: CO2 atmospheric concenrtration was 280 ppm several hundred years ago, now 380 ppm