IEA Forecasts 73% Fossil Fuels’ Share In Global Energy Supply

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The International Energy Agency (IEA) has projected that fossil fuels’ share in global energy supply would drop to 73% by 2030 and carbon dioxide emissions peaking by 2025 despite the fact that global oil demand would peak this decade at about 102 million barrels per day (mbd) for two more decades.

The agency, in its latest ‘World Energy Outlook (WOE) 2023’ report stated that the drop in fossil fuel share in the global energy market had remained at around 80%  for decades..

According to the IEA’s Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS) data, from 2030, oil consumption will begin a slow decline by decreasing over by more than four million barrels per day to 97.4mbd in 2050, the IEA said in its

The report further predicted that in 2030, clean technologies would play a “greater role than today” as electric cars on the road worldwide will increase by 10 times, and renewables’ share of the global electricity mix will be near 50%, up by 30% while heat pumps and other electric heating systems will outsell fossil fuel boilers globally, and investment into new offshore wind projects will be three times more than new coal and gas-fired power plants.

Commenting on the report’s findings, Global Net-Zero Transformation Advisory Operations Manager, EcoAct, Lindsay Ventress, said: “The World Energy Outlook 2023 underscores the increasingly narrow path toward preserving the goal of 1.5°C warming, yet provides hope that this remains attainable if we promptly embark on transformative climate actions.

“The report’s call for an annual twofold increase in energy efficiency improvements underscores its critical role in a sustainable future, but also the current failure of legislators to get to grips with this vital requirement. In light of this, businesses cannot afford to merely wait for government commitments; they must become catalysts for progress,” she added.

Even so, the IEA maintained that demand for fossil fuels was set to remain “far too high” to limit the global rise in temperatures to 1.5°C, as per the Paris Agreement.

The agency further warned that despite the impressive growth in clean energy, if the policies are not changed, global emissions would remain high to push the temperature limit by around 2.4°C this century.

The STEPS also estimates a peak in energy-related carbon dioxide emissions in the mid-2020s.

Speaking on the report’s findings, the IEA Executive Director, Fatih Birol, explained: “Taking into account the ongoing strains and volatility in traditional energy markets today, claims that oil and gas represent safe or secure choices for the world’s energy and climate future look weaker than ever.”

According to the report, the tense situation in the Middle East “is a reminder of hazards in oil markets a year after Russia cut gas supplies to Europe”. In the STEPS, the share of seaborne crude oil trade from the Middle East to Asia rises from around 40 per cent to 50 per cent by 2050.

The WOE highlights the fears in the natural gas markets due to instability and price hikes after Russia cut supplies to Europe while also foreseeing a surge in new liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects from 2025, with the prospect of  adding more than 250 billion cubic metres per year new capacity by 2030, representing 45% of the current global LNG supply  .

While some of the immediate pressures of the global energy crisis have eased due to the current geopolitical situation and the global economic developments, the IEA drew attention to the “unsettled” global energy market, noting that “this underscores, once again, the frailties of the fossil fuel age and the benefits for energy security as well as for emissions of shifting to a more sustainable energy system.”

It stated that developing economies had been experiencing the largest increase in demand for energy services as the extreme volatility in energy markets have pushed for an “affordable, reliable, and resilient supply”.

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