Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on November 28, 2012

Bookmark and Share

World Energy Report 2012

Rarely does the release of a data-driven report on energy trends trigger front-page headlines around the world.  That, however, is exactly what happened on November 12th when the prestigious Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) released this year’s edition of its World Energy Outlook.  In the process, just about everyone missed its real news, which should have set off alarm bells across the planet.

Claiming that advances in drilling technology were producing an upsurge in North American energy output, World Energy Outlook predicted that the United States would overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the planet’s leading oil producer by 2020.  “North America is at the forefront of a sweeping transformation in oil and gas production that will affect all regions of the world,” declared IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven in a widely quoted statement.

In the U.S., the prediction of imminent supremacy in the oil-output sweepstakes was generally greeted with unabashed jubilation.  “This is a remarkable change,” said John Larson of IHS, a corporate research firm.  “It’s truly transformative.  It’s fundamentally changing the energy outlook for this country.”  Not only will this result in a diminished reliance on imported oil, he indicated, but also generate vast numbers of new jobs.  “This is about jobs.  You know, it’s about blue-collar jobs.  These are good jobs.”

The editors of the Wall Street Journal were no less ecstatic.  In an editorial with the eye-catching headline “Saudi America,” they lauded U.S. energy companies for bringing about a technological revolution, largely based on the utilization of hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) to extract oil and gas from shale rock.  That, they claimed, was what made a new mega-energy boom possible.  “This is a real energy revolution,” the Journal noted, “even if it’s far from the renewable energy dreamland of so many government subsidies and mandates.”

Other commentaries were similarly focused on the U.S. outpacing Saudi Arabia and Russia, even if some questioned whether the benefits would be as great as advertised or obtainable at an acceptable cost to the environment.

While agreeing that the expected spurt in U.S. production is mostly “good news,” Michael A. Levi of the Council on Foreign Relations warned that gas prices will not drop significantly because oil is a global commodity and those prices are largely set by international market forces.  “[T]he U.S. may be slightly more protected, but it doesn’t give you the energy independence some people claim,” he told the New York Times.

Some observers focused on whether increased output and job creation could possibly outweigh the harm that the exploitation of extreme energy resources like fracked oil or Canadian tar sands was sure to do to the environment. Daniel J. Weiss of the Center for American Progress, for example, warned of a growing threat to America’s water supply from poorly regulated fracking operations.  “In addition, oil companies want to open up areas off the northern coast of Alaska in the Arctic Ocean, where they are not prepared to address a major oil blowout or spill like we had in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Such a focus certainly offered a timely reminder of how important oil remains to the American economy (and political culture), but it stole attention away from other aspects of the World Energy Report that were, in some cases, downright scary.  Its portrait of our global energy future should have dampened enthusiasm everywhere, focusing as it did on an uncertain future energy supply, excessive reliance on fossil fuels, inadequate investment in renewables, and an increasingly hot, erratic, and dangerous climate.  Here are some of the most worrisome takeaways from the report.

Shrinking World Oil Supply

Given the hullabaloo about rising energy production in the U.S., you would think that the IEA report was loaded with good news about the world’s future oil supply.  No such luck.  In fact, on a close reading anyone who has the slightest familiarity with world oil dynamics should shudder, as its overall emphasis is on decline and uncertainty.

Take U.S. oil production surpassing Saudi Arabia’s and Russia’s.  Sounds great, doesn’t it?  Here’s the catch: previous editions of the IEA report and the International Energy Outlook, its equivalent from the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE), rested their claims about a growing future global oil supply on the assumption that those two countries would far surpass U.S. output.  Yet the U.S. will pull ahead of them in the 2020s only because, the IEA now asserts, their output is going to fall, not rise as previously assumed.

This is one hidden surprise in the report that’s gone unnoticed.  According to the DoE’s 2011 projections, Saudi production was expected to rise to 13.9 million barrels per day in 2025, and Russian output to 12.2 million barrels, jointly providing much of the world’s added petroleum supply; the United States, in this calculation, would reach the 11.7 million barrel mark.

The IEA’s latest revision of those figures suggests that U.S. production will indeed rise, as expected, to about 11 million barrels per day in 2025, but that Saudi output will unexpectedly fall to about 10.6 million barrels and Russian to 9.7 million barrels.  The U.S., that is, will essentially become number one by default.  At best, then, the global oil supply is not going to grow appreciably — despite the IEA’s projection of a significant upswing in international demand.

But wait, suggests the IEA, there’s still one wild card hope out there: Iraq.  Yes, Iraq.  In the belief that the Iraqis will somehow overcome their sectarian differences, attain a high level of internal stability, establish a legal framework for oil production, and secure the necessary investment and technical support, the IEA predicts that its output will jump from 3.4 million barrels per day this year to 8 million barrels in 2035, adding an extra 4.6 million barrels to the global supply.  In fact, claims the IEA, this gain would represent half the total increase in world oil production over the next 25 years.  Certainly, stranger things have happened, but for the obvious reasons, it remains an implausible scenario.

Add all this together — declining output from Russia and Saudi Arabia, continuing strife in Iraq, uncertain results elsewhere — and you get insufficient oil in the 2020s and 2030s to meet anticipated world demand.  From a global warming perspective that may be good news, but economically, without a massive increase in investment in alternate energy sources, the outlook is grim.  You don’t know what bad times are until you don’t have enough energy to run the machinery of civilization.  As suggested by the IEA, “Much is riding on Iraq’s success… Without this supply growth from Iraq, oil markets would be set for difficult times.”

Continuing Reliance on Fossil Fuels

For all the talk of the need to increase reliance on renewable sources of energy, fossil fuels — coal, oil, and natural gas — will continue to provide most of the additional energy supplies needed to satisfy soaring world demand.  “Taking all new developments and policies into account,” the IEA reported, “the world is still failing to put the global energy system onto a more sustainable path.”  In fact, recent developments seem to favor greater fossil-fuel reliance.

In the United States, for instance, the increased extraction of oil and gas from shale formations has largely silenced calls for government investment in renewable technology.  In its editorial on the IEA report, for example, the Wall Street Journal ridiculed such investment.  It had, the Journal’s writers suggested, now become unnecessary due to the Saudi Arabian-style oil and gas boom to come.  “Historians will one day marvel that so much political and financial capital was invested in a [failed] green-energy revolution at the very moment a fossil fuel revolution was aborning,” they declared.

One aspect of this energy “revolution” deserves special attention. The growing availability of cheap natural gas, thanks to hydro-fracking, has already reduced the use of coal as a fuel for electrical power plants in the United States.  This would seem to be an obvious environmental plus, since gas produces less climate-altering carbon dioxide than does coal.  Unfortunately, coal output and its use haven’t diminished: American producers have simply increased their coal exports to Asia and Europe.  In fact, U.S. coal exports are expected to reach as high as 133 million tons in 2012, overtaking an export record set in 1981.

Despite its deleterious effects on the environment, coal remains popular in countries seeking to increase their electricity output and promote economic development.  Shockingly, according to the IEA, it supplied nearly half of the increase in global energy consumption over the last decade, growing faster than renewables.  And the agency predicts that coal will continue its rise in the decades ahead.  The world’s top coal consumer, China, will burn ever more of it until 2020, when demand is finally expected to level off.  India’s usage will rise without cessation, with that country overtaking the U.S. as the number two consumer around 2025.

In many regions, notes the IEA report, the continued dominance of fossil fuels is sustained by government policies.  In the developing world, countries commonly subsidize energy consumption, selling transportation, cooking, and heating fuels at below-market rates.  In this way, they hope to buffer their populations from rising commodity costs, and so protect their regimes from popular unrest.  Cutting back on such subsidies can prove dangerous, as in Jordan where a recent government decision to raise fuel prices led to widespread riots and calls for the monarchy’s abolition.  In 2011, such subsidies amounted to $523 billion globally, says the IEA, up almost 30% from 2010 and six times greater than subsidies for renewable energy.

No Hope for Averting Catastrophic Climate Change

Of all the findings in the 2012 edition of the World Energy Outlook, the one that merits the greatest international attention is the one that received the least.  Even if governments take vigorous steps to curb greenhouse gas emissions, the report concluded, the continuing increase in fossil fuel consumption will result in “a long-term average global temperature increase of 3.6 degrees C.”

This should stop everyone in their tracks.  Most scientists believe that an increase of 2 degrees Celsius is about all the planet can accommodate without unimaginably catastrophic consequences: sea-level increases that will wipe out many coastal cities, persistent droughts that will destroy farmland on which hundreds of millions of people depend for their survival, the collapse of vital ecosystems, and far more.  An increase of 3.6 degrees C essentially suggests the end of human civilization as we know it.

To put this in context, human activity has already warmed the planet by about 0.8 degrees C — enough to produce severe droughts around the world, trigger or intensify intense storms like Hurricane Sandy, and drastically reduce the Arctic ice cap.  “Given those impacts,” writes noted environmental author and activist Bill McKibben, “many scientists have come to think that two degrees is far too lenient a target.”  Among those cited by McKibben is Kerry Emanuel of MIT, a leading authority on hurricanes. “Any number much above one degree involves a gamble,” Emanuel writes, “and the odds become less and less favorable as the temperature goes up.” Thomas Lovejoy, once the World Bank’s chief biodiversity adviser, puts it this way: “If we’re seeing what we’re seeing today at 0.8 degrees Celsius, two degrees is simply too much.”

At this point, it’s hard even to imagine what a planet that’s 3.6 degrees C hotter would be like, though some climate-change scholars and prophets — like former Vice President Al Gore in An Inconvenient Truth — have tried.  In all likelihood, the Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets would melt entirely, raising sea levels by several dozen feet and completely inundating coastal cities like New York and Shanghai.  Large parts of Africa, Central Asia, the Middle East, and the American Southwest would be rendered uninhabitable thanks to lack of water and desertification, while wildfires of a sort that we can’t imagine today would consume the parched forests of the temperate latitudes.

In a report that leads with the “good news” of impending U.S. oil supremacy, to calmly suggest that the world is headed for that 3.6 degree C mark is like placing a thermonuclear bomb in a gaudily-wrapped Christmas present.  In fact, the “good news” is really the bad news: the energy industry’s ability to boost production of oil, coal, and natural gas in North America is feeding a global surge in demand for these commodities, ensuring ever higher levels of carbon emissions.  As long as these trends persist — and the IEA report provides no evidence that they will be reversed in the coming years — we are all in a race to see who gets to the Apocalypse first.

Michael Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, a TomDispatch regular, and the author, most recently, of The Race for What’s Left (Metropolitan Books).  A documentary movie based on his book Blood and Oil can be previewed and ordered at www.bloodandoilmovie.com. You can follow Klare on Facebook by clicking here.

TomDispatch



11 Comments on "World Energy Report 2012"

  1. SOS on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 12:07 pm 

    Lol. Selling the song book to the choir.

  2. Charlie Bucket on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 1:37 pm 

    We can all be grateful that we are blessed with the great wisdom of SOS who is smarter than all the scientific community combined. Gosh, I feel lucky, safe and secure after reading SOS’s wisdom. I for one just want to say thank you SOS for blessing us with your wise, insightful and oh so helpful and constructive comments. ASSCLOWN!

  3. Arthur on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 1:46 pm 

    I wish there were more SOS-es here, as everybody is too much in agreement with each other and that is not good for lively debate.

  4. Bor on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 3:34 pm 

    The statement about the temperature rising discredits viability of the report.
    The reports is written based on nothing but rumors, wild guesses, etc.

  5. SOS on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 3:58 pm 

    Exactly Bor, it is imparting its wisdom to the hordes as they march on the libraries of Alexandria to snuff out all that knowledge that brings them nothing but trouble.

  6. SK on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 5:28 pm 

    I haven’t heard anybody mention NET oil, given that more energy is required to drill and lift what’s left, nor the fact that Saudis and Russians are using a greater percentage of the oil they produce, resulting in less to export. Then there’s that pesky redefinition of oil to include biofuels, ngls, etc….

  7. Rick on Wed, 28th Nov 2012 9:51 pm 

    For those who think climate change (AGW) is a joke, think again.

    AGW is the biggest threat to this planet. It trumps everything. So keep on driving, and driving your stupid SUVs, flying, keeping the lights on, in the McMansions, etc. Until one day, the farmland is gone, and so is your food source. Good luck fools.

    I little eye opener for some here, regarding the drought, see here:
    http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/

  8. BillT on Thu, 29th Nov 2012 12:58 am 

    Bor…rising temperatures don’t need to be advertised. If you live in the real world and are over 30, you can see the changes. The ones coming in the next 30 years will be killers.

    SK… you won’t hear about NET energy because it has been decreasing for at least 10 years. The Saudis won’t be exporting oil in less than 10 years. Oops! Ditto for most other oil producing countries. And, yes, SOS,
    even your oil sludge will be gone by then and natural gas will be in steep decline.

    Rick, you are correct. Real news never makes it to the public in the Empire. They might realize that it is all NOT rosy and that they should stop buying junk and driving to the mall and prepare for the years ahead. Many reports have come out from reputable sources these last 5 years that tell us we are close to extinction as a species. But, ignore them if you will. You will soon not be able to as climate change impacts YOUR life.

  9. GregT on Thu, 29th Nov 2012 4:54 am 

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again.

    The greenhouse effect, oil depletion, over population, food and water shortages, and pollution, were all taught as regular curriculum in my high school back in the seventies.

    The scientists knew 40 years ago what we are witnessing today. The only thing that they didn’t teach us about was ocean acidification.
    They taught us that the oceans were so vast and untapped, that they would feed us for generations.

    It would appear that they were a bit over optimistic.

  10. poaecdotcom on Thu, 29th Nov 2012 5:29 am 

    GregT

    Agreed about the scientists but what I wish they would have taught(teach) in school if:

    The power of the exponential function vis-a-vis finite systems

    The exponential nature of our money supply (debt based) and the problem with central banks

    growth is not the holy grail but in fact a cursed chalise.

    Then the scientists might of had 10 mins with the microphone, alas.

    The growth paradigm is dying, long live the LOCAL, sustainable paradigm!!

  11. GregT on Thu, 29th Nov 2012 9:37 am 

    Poaecdotcom,

    As long as the corporations control governments and the media, the scientists voices will not be heard, or even listened to. There is no debate, there is only misinformation. The misinformation of greed.

    This should be obvious reading many of the comments here.

    People are generally selfish, and only care about their own well being. They think that the reality of the last couple of generations is the way that it should always be, despite tens of thousands of years of human existence to the contrary.

    We never had all of this needless crap that we have today, that does nothing to instill the sense of how insignificant our lives on this planet really are. We all die. Every one of us. Yet we focus on how we can keep our technologies alive, while we destroy the planet that we should be taking care of for future generations.

    Unless consensus changes, and we stop believing that we are in control of the earth and that everything on it is merely human property or human resources, we are doomed to complete failure.

    I would like to believe that we actually have the ability to be stewards of this amazing planet, but from what I see and hear on a daily basis, we do not deserve to continue on as a species.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *