Juliet
Samuel 10 AUGUST
2017 • 10:59PM
The cost of
buying an electric vehicle could reach parity with normal cars by the early
2020s
Remember
“peak oil”? It’s had many iterations over the years. I remember sitting in a
café just four years ago, while the executive of a small oil exploration firm
explained to me that all the easy-to-reach oil was gone. What was needed, he
explained, was for intrepid companies like his to go out and find the tricky
stuff hidden in under-explored basins. This would be more expensive but prices
were high. What else could the world do?
Rather a
lot, it turns out. In fact, that talk of “peak oil” is now being replaced by
another prospect: peak oil demand. This week, GTM Research and Wood Mackenzie,
the influential Scottish energy research house, published an analysis
suggesting global fossil fuel demand could peak in the next five years. Paul
McConnell, the author of the analysis, said two or three years ago it was hard
to get oil and gas firms interested. But in the last year, “it’s become
virtually all we talk about with clients”.
Just like
record companies and retailers, oil and gas firms are scrambling to get their
heads around the coming disruption. Mainstream investors, even those holding
companies like ExxonMobil, are pushing them to publish analysis of how
decarbonisation will affect their assets and what they plan to do.
Investors
of oil and gas firms are asking them to publish details into how they will deal
with decarbonisation
These
investors know that the fossil fuel industry is about to be caught by a
gathering storm of electric vehicles, increasing energy efficiency and the
plummeting costs of production for renewables.
Altogether,
in McConnell’s “disruptive” scenario, these advances will reduce fossil fuel
demand by 6.5 million barrels a day by 2025. That’s about 7pc of total daily
demand. This isn’t Wood Mackenzie’s most likely scenario at present. But
perhaps it should be.
Recent
announcements by France and Britain commit them to phasing out
hydrocarbon-burning vehicles in line with the speedy scenario, not the base
case.
And history
tells us that established industries are very bad at grasping the pace and
scale of disruption heading their way. Change can happen with astonishing
speed, as the rise of oil shows. From 1949 to 1972, global oil demand rose by a
factor of 5.5 in
23 years. In Europe, it rose by a factor of 15. In Japan, by 137 times.
History
tells us established industries are very bad at grasping the pace and scale of
disruption heading their way
If the
fast-changing scenario laid out by Wood Mackenzie is right, carbon emissions
will peak in the mid 2020s, equating to a 2.7 degree rise in global
temperatures. That’s well above the two-degree warming limit environmentalists
would like, but far exceeds the targets of the Paris climate change agreement.
Policies to
manage this change will be needed, but subsidies for renewable energy won’t.
Between 2015 and 2035, McConnell’s scenario sees the capital cost of producing
renewable energy plunge from $1.70 (£1.31) to 90 cents per watt for wind, and
from $1.60 to 50 cents per watt for solar.
Crucially,
given the intermittent nature of wind and sunshine, energy storage costs fall
fastest, from $1.80 to just 40 cents. Meanwhile, the cost of buying an electric
vehicle could reach parity with normal cars by the early 2020s. Once that
happens, the change should accelerate.
By 2040, we
may see a 100pc replacement rate. The Paris agreement and renewable subsidies
might soon be out of date, but the changes still require state involvement.
Like oil
and gas companies, governments have to start planning. That means redesigning
electricity markets, updating power grids and, eventually, working out what to
do with unnecessary legacy power plants. Countries that decide instead to keep
burning coal might benefit from cheaper energy in the short term, but they’ll
be poorly placed for the next wave of energy technology.
None of
this means oil markets are about to disappear. Fossil fuels will still account
for most of the energy market for several decades to come because the vast
capital investment needed to implement the changes will take time to deploy. But
once costs fall, the logic of switching becomes self-reinforcing.
In the
Nineties, the consulting firm McKinsey was asked to predict what the global
market for smartphones would be by 2000. It guessed just under 1 million –
wrong by a factor of 109.
The
decarbonisation of energy is coming. It’s time for governments, investors and
the industry to plan for it, rather than sticking their heads in the sand.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2017/08/10/green-tide-turning-against-oil-giants/
@ecologia @petróleo
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