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IEA downbeat on pace of energy transition

  • : Chemicals, Crude oil, Electricity, Emissions, Hydrogen, Natural gas, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 21/10/13

The world's progress on low-carbon energy is "far too slow to put global emissions into sustained decline towards net zero", the IEA said today to mark the launch of its World Energy Outlook 2021 (WEO).

Although the report recognises that "a new energy economy" is emerging "as solar, wind, electric vehicles and other low-carbon technologies flourish", it also notes that strong growth in global coal demand this year is pushing CO2 emissions towards their second-largest annual increase in history.

"The world's hugely encouraging clean energy momentum is running up against the stubborn incumbency of fossil fuels in our energy systems," IEA executive director Fatih Birol said. Birol calls on governments to resolve the problem at next month's UN Cop 26 climate conference by giving a clear signal that they are committed to rapidly scaling up the clean technologies of the future.

The WEO examines three scenarios, each outlining potential paths for energy supply and demand over the next 30 years. In addition to the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) scenario, which was published in May, the report explores the Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS), which is based on existing energy and climate measures as well as policy initiatives under development, and the Announced Pledges Scenario (APS), which assumes all of the net zero emissions pledges announced by governments so far are fully implemented on time.

In all three, peak oil demand arrives at various points before 2050. "For the first time in a WEO, oil demand goes into eventual decline in all the scenarios examined, although the timing and speed of the drop vary widely," the IEA said. In the STEPS, oil demand peaks at 104mn b/d in the mid-2030s and then declines very gradually to 2050. In the APS, consumption peaks soon after 2025 at 97mn b/d and falls to 77mn b/d in 2050. In the NZE, demand has already peaked and drops to 72mn b/d in 2030 and just 24mn b/d by 2050.

Demand for natural gas increases in all three scenarios over the next five years. "But there are sharp divergences after this," the WEO said. "The share of natural gas in the global energy mix remains around 25pc to 2050 in the STEPS, while it falls to 20pc in the APS and to 11pc in the NZE. Around 70pc of natural gas use in 2050 in the NZE is equipped with carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS)."

The IEA reiterates that in the NZE, no new oil and gas fields are needed beyond those already approved for development. One of the key reasons is a rapid rise in the use of low-emissions fuels, such as green hydrogen, alongside greater efficiency and electrification. But it warns that actual deployment of low-emissions fuels "is well off track". The current pipeline of planned low-carbon hydrogen projects falls short of the levels of use in 2030 assumed in the APS and even further short of the amounts required in the NZE, it said.

Clean path

To put the world on a path towards net zero emissions by 2050, the IEA says investment in clean energy projects and infrastructure needs to more than triple over this decade, to nearly $4 trillion/yr by 2030. And according to Birol, "some 70pc of that additional spending needs to happen in emerging and developing economies, where financing is scarce and capital remains up to seven times more expensive than in advanced economies".

The IEA suggests that there are four solutions available to close the gap over the next 10 years between today's climate pledges and the emissions reductions required to limit the increase in global temperatures to 1.5°C compared with pre-industrial levels. These include a "relentless focus on energy efficiency", a broad drive to cut methane emissions from fossil fuel operations, and a major boost to clean energy innovation.

The WEO also calls for "a massive additional push for clean electrification". This would involve, among other things, a doubling of solar and wind power capacity compared with what has already been pledged, a major expansion of other low-emissions power generation, and a rapid phase out of coal.


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24/11/18

Cop: Germany, UK, Canada co-operate on climate finance

Cop: Germany, UK, Canada co-operate on climate finance

Berlin, 18 November (Argus) — Germany, the UK, Canada and multilateral entity Climate Investment Funds (CIF) will provide around $1.3bn of climate finance for developing low-carbon production processes and green lead markets in developing and emerging countries, they announced today. The support aims to contribute to a "level playing field" for new climate-friendly, "green" markets, and drive forward a "successful global and fair transition to climate neutrality", Germany's federal ministry of economic affairs and climate action said. The contribution also "sends a strong signal to the international community and generates momentum towards [the next UN climate summit] Cop 30 in Brazil", German economy and climate minister Robert Habeck said. The German government has pledged around $220mn and the UK around $211mn, while over $900mn is to come from the CIF, with private-sector contributions leveraging the commitment, the ministry stressed. Canada will contribute unspecified "additional" funds. Further pledges from governments, civil organisations and private-sector investments will be "mobilised" over the next months, Habeck said. CIF was established in 2008 to finance pilot projects in developing countries at the request of the G8 and G20. The upcoming presidencies of the G7, G20 and Cop 30 aim to focus more strongly on climate finance, Habeck added. The Germany-founded Climate Club will support the implementation of the pledge, Habeck said. The club, which Germany views as the "central international forum for decarbonisation issues", held its second leaders' meeting last week, one year after its official launch at Cop 28 in Dubai. The club's global matchmaking platform, one of its key services, was also launched last week. The German government is pushing for a stronger role for "green guarantees", a type of blended finance, which could limit the pressure on public finances but mobilise private funds, as the financing risk would be to an extent guaranteed by the governments of developed countries. Germany's policy makers have repeatedly stressed the importance of private capital for climate finance, given the limited availability of public funds. The Green Guarantee Group, which was launched at Cop 28 and had its first "high-level political exchange" in Berlin last month, is to develop "concrete recommendations" before Cop 30 on how to "adjust the levers of the international financial system" so that funds flow to where they are most effective, according to Germany's economy ministry. Germany sees itself as a leading provider of climate finance, and said it contributed €9.9bn last year, of which €5.7bn came from the federal budget. Habeck at a side event at Cop 29 today also reiterated his call for an extra levy on oil and gas companies, which could be ploughed into funds directed at supporting climate action in developing countries. By Chloe Jardine Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Q&A: If you break it down, it is tried, tested: Xlinks


24/11/18
24/11/18

Q&A: If you break it down, it is tried, tested: Xlinks

London, 18 November (Argus) — Start-up developer Xlinks plans to connect 11.5GW of Moroccan wind and solar capacity, and a 5GW battery energy storage system, with the UK through two 1.8GW sub-sea cables, an ambitious project using "tried and tested" technologies. Argus spoke to chief executive James Humfrey about the project's timeline and progress. Edited highlights follow: For those who may not know, can you describe the Xlinks project? We are excited to bring clean energy from the Moroccan Sahara to north Devon. This will be a transformational surge of reliable, clean power, and we will bring it during the hours the UK needs electricity most, supporting Britain's ambitions to decarbonise, which you see in the news and most recently in Baku [at Cop 29]. The project will benefit the broader economy by displacing expensive, volatile imported gas and reducing wholesale power prices. It will also help balance the grid, feeding into the south of England, which has very high demand without significant grid upgrades. The independent Afry consultancy group calculated the project's socioeconomic benefit to be at least £17bn. It will also offer a reliable wind and solar energy supply, with nearly two times the solar radiation factor. [Moroccan] wind generation is slightly negatively correlated to UK output, helping overcome the dunkelflaute [dark lull] scenario, which is the advantage of moving electrons in time and space. This reliability complements the UK domestic renewables pipeline, primarily offshore and onshore wind, while aligning with Morocco's green export ambitions. Can you provide our subscribers with an update on the project, its timeline and any key milestones? It will be ready next decade. We are supporting the domestic supply chain through XLCC's HDVC cable expansion in Hunterston, Scotland . And we are set up to rapidly mobilise and deliver the project. We have a strong team of people who have worked on these projects before. For example, our HVDC cable team, led by Nigel Williams, built the North Sea Link between Blythe and Norway, tackling more complex problems than we face. They've built lots of interconnectors and know how to do it. I realise that Xlinks holds connection agreements for two 1.8GW connections with National Grid. Has Xlinks progressed with other national authorities, particularly those through which the cable will transit? We have worked with the Moroccan government, including [plans] around the land and conducting one of the world's longest [wind and solar] measurement campaigns. So, we've got excellent resource data regarding wind and solar energy. We have already obtained permits from [the transit countries] for route surveys and we have vessels in the water at the moment, undertaking geophys and geotech. Next year, we'll apply for the final installation permits, based on the environmental studies and other benefit data. We've taken a longer but less challenging route, with lower water depths, making it technically easier. It is, for example, less deep than the North Sea Link, which was a deliberate technical decision. The previous government marked Xlinks as a project of national significance . Do you expect any change under the new administration, and in what way has this classification affected progress ? No, it hasn't affected us. We completed the public consultations over the summer and are about to submit our DCO [development consent order] application, which is a large amount of work. We have finished that, with no changes [since the change of government]. It is probably worth saying that our land route in Devon is all underground. We don't have any pylons, which is much less intrusive. Has this improved Xlink's ability to generate capital interest? Is there any specific attempt to generate interest from sovereign wealth funds or other institutional investors? We've been fortunate that our blue-chip investors [Octopus, TotalEnergies, Taqa, GE Vernova and Africa Finance] are very keen on the project, and it matches their strategic plans. They want to go all the way through to construction. We may have further investors at the close, but they are our primary focus right now. Do you have an update on the contract for difference (CfD) process? Xlinks has published a desire to reach a £70-80/MWh strike price at 2012 prices. Yes, that remains our guidance. We are working through the CfD and Treasury Green Book process with the Department of Energy. It is quite a structured process. How do you reconcile that strike price with far lower prices reached in recent allocation rounds (AR), namely AR6, although the technologies are not directly comparable? Firstly, in the NESO report, the forecasts for offshore wind [prices] rise quite a bit as they move out to 2030, so AR6 is a reference, but there are figures in the NESO report that are above our £70-80 [strike price]. Importantly, it is not a comparison between apples and apples. Our profile is completely different from that of offshore wind. We offer firm power for 19 hours a day, optimised for peak hour demand and very high reliability, akin to nuclear. Given our flexibility, we can also provide various other services, including frequency and even black start services. The development contains ambitious plans for vast-scale battery storage of up to 5GW. Given the difficulties faced by several European battery manufacturers, do you foresee any significant supply chain challenges? We have an ongoing battery procurement process, and the invitations to tender have gone out. We've had good interest at competitive levels and are confident in it. We are not seeing any challenges, and it's going very well. And what does the flexibility and opportunity a battery offers at this scale mean for a project like Xlinks? It allows us to optimise during the diagonal shift of solar power, when the UK grid needs us most. Additionally, it gives us a sub-second response, giving us flexibility and opening the door to the frequency services we mentioned earlier. It is very valuable and allows us to provide benefit at scale and at speed. Does the UK's ambition, corroborated by NESO's latest report to become a net power exporter beyond 2030, change the project's economic viability or impact it in any way? No, the report does not change our viability or where we fit in the future system. In fact, it further emphasises the part we can play. If you look at demand, it is very likely to increase again by another 23pc in 2030-35, and considering our generation profile, producing in periods of low domestic wind production, [it fits well]. Additionally, when we compare it to other sources of clean [baseload] generation, such as nuclear, you see solar, wind and transmission projects have extremely good predictability of outcome and a shorter delivery timeline. Xlinks has stated an ambition to investigate a Morocco-German link. What might this look like? Would it involve an entirely new generation facility, too? First, the Morocco-UK power project is very much our first priority. We're focused on that and we think bringing this to a financial close will help unlock a range of projects across the industry. And demonstrate the art of the possible. We do have some early feasibility work going on. It would be entirely separate, and that would include generation as well. Do you have any closing thoughts that you would like to leave our subscribers? What is different about this is its scale. But when you break it down, these are all tried-and-tested technologies. There is nothing unusual about them, whether wind and solar in Morocco or large-scale batteries. We are not an interconnector, but long-distance transmission has a long history in the UK. When you look at the water depths, it is less complicated than North Sea Link. It has all been done before, in its parts — just the scale is different. By Daniel Craig Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Progress on actions to cut emissions uncertain


24/11/18
24/11/18

Cop: Progress on actions to cut emissions uncertain

Baku, 18 November (Argus) — Progress on mitigation — actions to cut greenhouse gas emissions — is uncertain at the UN Cop 29 climate summit, as talks on a specific text related to the issue are at risk to be pushed back to 2025, losing any progress made in the past year. Some countries had proposed using the mitigation work programme — a work stream focused on reducing emissions — to progress the commitment made at Cop 28 in 2023 to "transition away" from fossil fuels. But talks have stalled and could end without a conclusion at the summit. Developed countries as well as developing nations including some small island states and countries in Latin America — such as Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Mexico — have expressed disappointment about how mitigation talks were going. New Zealand called on countries to follow up on last year's decision on mitigation at Cop 28 and Norway added that these issues deserved "more than silence on mitigation". Switzerland complained that mitigation was "held up by a select few", and said that the discussion was critical for increased commitments for next year's 2035 Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). NDCs are countries' climate plans that include emissions reduction targets. Cop parties are due to submit new versions by February 2025. The US also said that Cop 29 needed to "reaffirm the historical Global Stocktake decision" taken last year. And developed nations, led by the EU, called for the discussion to continue this week — the second week of Cop 29. But countries including Bolivia, Iran and Saudi Arabia, for the Arab Group, pushed back on this. The mitigation work programme is "not… open to reinterpretation", Saudi Arabia's representative said today. The country said earlier that it did not want new targets to be imposed, complaining about the "top-down approach" taken by developed countries. India reminded developed countries that they have yet to deliver on their new finance commitment — a crucial step for more ambitious NDCs in developing nations. But "Cop 29 cannot and will not be silent on mitigation", the summit's president, Mukhtar Babayev said today. "On mitigation we have been clear that we must make progress, "he said, adding that he has asked ministers from Norway and South Africa to consult on what an outcome on mitigation could look like. EU climate commissioner Wopke Hoekstra today said that it is "imperative that we send a strong signal this week for the next round of NDCs", he said. Points related to mitigation — including transitioning away from fossil fuels and phasing out inefficient fossil fuels subsidies — are currently mentioned in the draft text for the new finance goal, known as the new collective quantified goal (NCQG). It is the key issue at Cop 29. Developed countries agreed to deliver $100bn/yr in climate finance to developing nations over 2020-25, and Cop parties must decide on the next stage — including the amount. Developed countries are likely push for the fossil fuel language to stay in the finance goal text, especially if mitigation talks stall elsewhere. But countries such as Saudi Arabia have long opposed this, while developed countries have received some criticism for still not having given an amount for the new finance target. By Georgia Gratton, Prethika Nair and Caroline Varin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: G20 momentum key to Cop climate finance outcome


24/11/18
24/11/18

Cop: G20 momentum key to Cop climate finance outcome

Baku, 18 November (Argus) — The outcome of the G20 leaders' summit in Brazil taking place on Monday and Tuesday on climate financing will be key to the success of the UN Cop 29 climate conference in Baku, Azerbaijan, summit president Mukhtar Babayev said today. "We cannot succeed without [the G20], and the world is waiting to hear from them," Babayev said. The leaders' summit takes place at the beginning of the second week of the Cop 29 conference. Progress at Cop 29 last week towards agreeing a new climate finance target for developing countries — the so-called NCQG — was not sufficient, Babayev said. He is concerned that parties are not moving towards each other fast enough. Little progress was made in the first week on three main areas of disagreement: the amount of climate finance which should be provided, how it should be structured, and which countries should contribute. Babayev urged G20 leaders, including US president Joe Biden who will be present in Brazil, to send a "positive signal of commitment to solving the climate crisis," and deliver clear mandates for Cop 29. The talks in Baku move from the technical to the political phase this week. Ministers typically have more authority to move red lines. But parties should focus on wrapping up less contentious issues early in the week so as to leave time for major political decisions, according to Simon Stiell, executive secretary of UN climate body the UNFCCC. Babayev expects talks on the amount of climate financing which will be on the table to continue until the last day of the summit at the end of this week, he said. The Cop presidency has invited former and upcoming Cop hosts the UK and Brazil to advise and "ensure an ambitious and balanced package of negotiated outcomes." Both countries have in the past week communicated more ambitious emissions reduction targets, which have been broadly welcomed. The EU today called for the Cop presidency to step up its role in the process. "We do need a presidency to lead, to steer us in the direction of a safe landing ground," European commissioner for climate action Wopke Hoekstra said. Hoekstra declined to be drawn on the amount of climate financing that the EU would like to see. Developing countries have pushed for a high goal of $1.3 trillion/yr, well above the previous target of $100bn/yr. The EU today reiterated instead its desire for the base of contributor countries to be enlarged beyond the current roster of countries defined as developed under the UNFCCC, and for as much private finance to be mobilised as possible to add to public finance. By Rhys Talbot Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

German diesel demand at year-high with winter shift


24/11/18
24/11/18

German diesel demand at year-high with winter shift

Hamburg, 18 November (Argus) — Traders in Germany noted a significant increase in diesel demand at the start of the past week because of lower prices and the transition to winter-grade fuel. Spot sales of heating oil and gasoline rose, particularly in the south and southwest. Middle distillates in Germany traded on 11-12 November at lower prices than in the week prior, pressured by declining Ice gasoil futures. But these rose in the following days. There is uncertainty in the market around the potential impact of US President-elect Donald Trump's trade policy from January. The upcoming switch to winter diesel in Germany could be leading to increased demand. Most tank storage and refinery operators have, since 1 November, been offering diesel and gasoline in winter quality. Only winter-grade fuel can be dispensed from 16 November. Consumers in recent weeks have been ordering smaller amounts of diesel, waiting for the switch to winter specification before replenishing stocks, traders told Argus . Consequently, diesel spot volumes reported to Argus increased to the highest this year on 11 November. Traded quantities of heating oil and gasoline also rose. But buying interest for middle distillates and gasoline weakened as the week went on. This month has seen high imports into northern Germany and elevated refinery production. On the Rhine river, falling water levels at the Kaub bottleneck has led to increased freight rates from Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) to destinations on the Upper Rhine. But demand for shipping space from importers in mid-November is so weak that the effect of low water levels on the rates was dampened, shipowners said. Water levels are forecast to rise in the coming days. TotalEnergies' 240,000 b/d Leuna refinery in eastern Germany, close to the border with Czech Republic, ended a maintenance shutdown in the past week. The shutdown had only minor effects on product availability but lasted longer than expected because of technical problems when ramping up. Leuna producing again marks the end of this year's maintenance season in Germany. By Johannes Guhlke Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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