Natural Gas Industry: a dynamic industry and a bridgehead to sustainable energy supply Auke Lont
1. INTRODUCTION What is Natural Gas? ‘relatively clean fuel with very low density’ 1 m3 = 11 kWh = 1 litre LFO CH4 Typical useNot used Homeheating Transportation Power generation(liquid at – 160C) Petrochemical feedstock
2. some “ OLD TRUTHS” 2. some “ OLD TRUTHS” 1975Natural gas shall not be used for power generation 1983UK natural gas resource base rapidly declining after 1995 1984USA Natural gas bubble will soon burst
1985Norwegian gas production will stabilize at 40 BCM/YR Dutch Groningen Field will be depleted in 25 years 2. “ OLD TRUTHS” cont. 2. “ OLD TRUTHS” cont.
EU DIRECTIVE “restriction of use of natural gas in power stations” EU DIRECTIVE “restriction of use of natural gas in power stations” Whereas: Natural gas quantities available are limited Natural gas should be reserved for “premium” application Natural gas should be reserved for “premium” application
EU DIRECTIVE “restriction of use of natural gas in power stations” EU DIRECTIVE “restriction of use of natural gas in power stations” Now therefore: “... new contracts.., and construction of new power stations using natural gas must be subject to prior authorization... “... new contracts.., and construction of new power stations using natural gas must be subject to prior authorization member states shall encourage cancellation of existing contracts for supply to power plants...”... member states shall encourage cancellation of existing contracts for supply to power plants...”
3. Some FACTS
EU DIRECTIVE “.. whereas natural gas has specific advantages for the production of electricity in terms of limiting emissions of pollutants .. whereas technological advantages have enabled natural gas to be used for electricity generation having advantages both of lower capital and operating costs and greater efficiency compared with units using other fuels.. .. in view of the current developments on the gas market the restriction should not be retained..”
GRONINGEN GAS FIELD (Netherlands) remaining reserves cumulative production Source: Ministry of Economic Affairs, Netherlands
POWER GENERATION IN UK - natural gas- BCM/YR
WORLD ENERGY RESERVES - natural gas vs oil - oil natural gas Source: BP, World Energy Review
WORLD REMAINING GAS RESERVES Remaining years of production Source: BP, World Energy Review R/P oil = 40 years
4. WHY ARE WE OFTEN WRONG? “Right forces, wrong model” Environment Economic growth Market Reserve base Technology Regulatory framework Natural gas industry
UNDERESTIMATE 1)Power of technology 2) Power of the market 3) Power of the environment 4)Dynamics when forces meet
THE POWER OF TECHNOLOGY - drilling of wells- 3,557, Cost pr. m $.$ Horizontal length km Cost pr m Horizontal length km
THE POWER OF TECHNOLOGY - gas turbine Efficiency % Source: GE Cost per kW 50
UK gas industry – new supplies => new dynamics – new products UK electricity industry: natural gas substitutes coal Telecom Airline industry Interaction between markets and technology can reshape industries THE POWER OF THE MARKET deregulation
THE POWER OF ENVIRONMENT CO2-emissions in electricity generation kg/MWh Coal gas coal
5. THE ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE “ How to combine the natural gas potential with global warming challenges?”
November 26, 2007 Econ PowerPoint presentation template WORLD CO2-EMISSIONS 1000mt oil gas coal Source: IEA coal gas oil
KYOTO AGREEMENT 1. CO2-emission has a cost 2. Cost effective solutions
ENERGY CONSUMPTION VS ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION - OECD - Electricity Energy Index ,5 1 1,5 2
oil natural gas coal hydro nuclear 1. Stabilize/reduce energy consumption 2. Increase natural gas market share 3. Long term solutions for power generation -gas-nuclear -carbon capture and storage for coal THE ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE