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Energy Technology Perspectives 2008

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Presentation on theme: "Energy Technology Perspectives 2008"— Presentation transcript:

1 Energy Technology Perspectives 2008
Dr. Robert K. Dixon

2 Economic Development: Energy Deprivation
In 2030, if no new policies are implemented, there will still be 1.4 billion people without electricity. Source: IEA WEO

3 Environmental Protection: Global CO2 Emissions Increasing
China overtakes US in CO2 emissions in 2007 Source: IEA WEO

4 Imbalance Between Oil Demand & Reserves
Oil Reserves 3% 7% 25% Updated July Source: International Energy Annual 2003 (EIA). Canada’s reserves include tar sands. Note United States’ oil resource versus its use.

5 Energy Technology Perspectives Publication 2008
How to achieve sustainable energy future Short and medium term technology policy needs Special attention for technology roadmaps Scenario analysis Baseline WEO2007 Reference Scenario Global stabilization by 2050 (ACT) Global 50% reduction by 2050 (BLUE)

6 ACT Scenarios Energy CO2 emissions in 2050 reduced to 2005 level
Revision of ACT as published in ETP2006 Implies a significantly adjusted energy system

7 Blue Scenarios -50% energy related CO2 in 2050, compared to 2005
Consistent with 450 ppm (depending on post-2050 emissions) Blue is only possible with global participation Implies completely different energy system

8 A New Energy Revolution: Reducing Energy Related CO2 Emissions
Baseline Emissions 62 Gt BLUE Map Emissions 14 Gt

9 Average Annual Power Generation Capacity Additions, 2010 – 2050
An Energy Revolution

10 Cost of Emissions Reductions
Technology Pessimism Optimism To bring emissions back to current levels by 2050 options with a cost up to USD 50/t are needed. Reducing emissions by 50% would require options with a cost up to USD 200/t, possibly even up to USD 500/t CO2

11 Key Technology Options (Roadmaps) 87% of emissions reduction in BLUE Map
Supply side CCS power generation Coal – IGCC Coal – USCSC Nuclear III + IV Solar – PV Solar – CSP Wind Biomass – IGCC & co-combustion 2nd generation biofuels Demand side Energy efficiency in buildings Energy efficient motor systems Efficient ICEs Heat pumps Plug-ins and electric vehicles Fuel cell vehicles Industrial CCS Solar heating

12 Roadmaps – Example CCS 10% of CO2 reduction potential in BLUE Map

13 Power Generation Mix 46% Renewables

14 CO2 Capture and Storage Use in BLUE Map

15 Primary Energy Demand Important supply security benefits
Transport sector accounts for 78% of oil savings

16 Transport Sector Market Share in 2050, by Scenario and Technology

17 LDV Technology Costs

18 Transport Sector Emissions Reductions

19 Public Sector Energy R&D in OECD Countries – USD 10 bln/yr

20 Conclusions Deep emission cuts are technically achievable
A global energy technology revolution is needed Action is urgent Barriers: financing needs; slow capital stock turnover; timeliness of technology development

21 Global Environment Facility
Financial mechanism of UNFCCC and other global environment conventions Six focal areas climate change, biodiversity, land degradation, international waters, ozone deletion, persistent organic pollutants 10 GEF agencies WB, UNDP, UNEP, UNIDO, IFAD, FAO, RDBs Since 1991, GEF has allocated over $7b and leveraged $25b in co-financing.

22 Thank You !


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