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Energy Security and Energy Policy – Where will our energy come from? Dieter Helm, New College, Oxford Wednesday, October 21 st 2009
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The Questions What’s the problem? What’s the threat? What are we doing? What are the solutions?
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What’s the problem? Security of supply is a public good Security is relative risk, price and storage Security is multidimensional price, quantity and time profiles Security is multinational European, global And it has to be solved whilst decarbonising...
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What’s the threat? Peak oil and demand Russia and gas supplies The investment challenge The climate change challenge
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Threat no. 1: Peak Oil Too much, not too little Price not necessarily up Arctic, Antarctic, Brazil, Mexico, Africa, Iraq etc etc Lots of coal Lots of unconventional gas
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Peak Oil: demand ever up Global population 6bn→ 9bn by 2050 Economic growth projections (% yoy) Sources: 1) IMF World Economic Outlook 2009 2) IEA World Energy Outlook 2006 1 2
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Peak Oil – proven reserves Proved oil reserves end 2008 – thousand million barrels Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2009 42 71 123 126 142 754
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Threat no. 2: Russia, Gazprom and the Ukraine Russia as an oil and gas economy Putin’s regime and Gazprom Russia’s borders and Russia outside its borders The Caspian problem Crimea, Ukraine and “unfinished business”
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Source: US Energy Information Administration, 2007 Russian Pipelines
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The European pipelines The special relationship Germany-Russia and Nord Stream Ukraine, storage and instability Nabucco – the Caspian gas can go north or west
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Threat no. 3: The investment challenge 1. The capacity crunch 2. The technology crunch
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The capacity crunch Legacy of the 1970s GDP 3% Electricity demand 7% Massive excess supplies in 1980s and 1990s And... North Sea oil and gas... Now... we need... 30-35GW replacement capacity Importing gas (and oil)
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The technology crunch Decarbonisation Existing technologies New technologies Application of IT to grids Smart meters Electrification of transport
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So what are we doing? Building windmills Energy efficiency EU 2020-20-20 package UK = 5% - 35% wind by 2020 gas gas gas gas imports security
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What should we do? Very large investment programme needed Design the market for investment Capacity markets Long term contracts
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And..... Decarbonise Large scale supplies New technologies
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Nuclear, CCS and Renewables The economics of nuclear Making CCS work – to deal with coal Renewables and technical change
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In a couple of decades.... Electrification of transport Batteries Smart meters and smart grids And lots of technical surprises.....
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So what do we do? A coherent charging policy Clear targets for government Clear delivery institutions Clear instruments – a price of carbon, a price of security, capacity markets, R&D policy etc etc...
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What will happen? An energy crisis – unless the recession continues Price spikes and volatility And much economic cost... CO2 as climate change continues
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Further information: http://www.dieterhelm.co.uk/publications FORTHCOMING: October 2009: Helm, D. and Hepburn, C. (eds), The Economics and Politics of Climate Change, Oxford University Press. Delivering a 21 st Century Infrastructure for Britain, with James Wardlaw and Ben Caldecott, Policy Exchange, September 2009. EU climate-change policy—a critique, Smith School Working Paper Series, September 2009 Environmental challenges in a warming world: consumption, costs and responsibilities, 2009, Tanner Lecture, February 21st. Georgia, Ukraine and Energy Security, CER Bulletin, February 2009. Credible Energy Policy, Meeting the challenges of security of supply and climate change, 2008, Policy Exchange Climate-change Policy—why has so little been achieved, 2008 Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 24:2, 211–238 Caps and Floors for the EU ETS: a practical carbon price, October 13th 2008 Meeting the Infrastructure Challenge, May 2008
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