Title: Access to Energy, Gas Flaring Reduction,
1- Access to Energy, Gas Flaring Reduction,
- and Domestic Market Development
- Presentation by Jacob Broekhuijsen, World Bank
- Africa Oil Gas Forum, Houston, November 29-31,
2004
2Source IEA
3Number of People Without Electricity, 1970-2030
Source IEA
4Access to Electricity
- 1.6 billion people today have no access to
electricity - About 80 of these people are located in India
(580 million) and sub-Saharan Africa (500
million) - Four out of five people lacking access to
electricity live in rural areas - By 2030, in the absence of radical new policies,
1.4 billion will still have no electricity (gt600
million in sub-Saharan Africa)
Source IEA
5Population Increase in Developing Countries
Source IEA
6Average per Capita Energy Consumption versus
Share of Population Living under Poverty Line,
2000
Source IEA
7Energy and Poverty - Traditional Biomass Use
- Today, 2.4 billion people in developing countries
rely heavily on traditional biomass for cooking
and heating - The use of biomass in traditional and inefficient
ways have significant implications - Productivity
- Health
- Gender
- Environment
- By 2030, in the absence of radical new policies,
over 2.6 billion people in developing countries
will continue to rely on biomass (less and less
available)
Source IEA
8Energy Poverty
- In the absence of radical new policies, energy
poverty will still be a major issue in the next
decades - Creating conditions to attract investment is the
main challenge. Domestic Market reforms are vital - Investment requirements for power generation in
developing countries amount to US 2.1 trillion
for the next 30 years
Source IEA
9Source NOAA DMSP-OLS Annual Composites of
Nigeria and CameroonRed 2003 only. Yellow
2003 and 2000. Green 2000 only. Cyan 2000
and 1992. Blue 1992 only. White 2003, 2000
1992
10Source NOAA DMSP-OLS Annual Composites of
Angola, Gabon, Congo and DRC Red 2003 only.
Yellow 2003 and 2000. Green 2000 only. Cyan
2000 and 1992. Blue 1992 only. White 2003,
2000 1992
11Background of Global Flaring
- Global venting and flaring level over 100
bcm/year, similar to - Total world gas consumption for half a month
- gt10 percent of committed emission reductions by
developed countries under the Kyoto Protocol for
the period 2008-2012 - Flaring in Africa alone could produce 200 TWh of
electricity - 50 of current power consumption of the African
continent - more than twice the level of power consumption in
Sub-Saharan Africa (excluding South Africa) - Global level has stayed constant for the last 20
years - 80 of global venting and flaring occurs in fewer
than 15 countries (reliability of available data
varies widely)
12Why still over 100 BCM / Year ?
- Individual governments and companies have had
successes in reducing flared gas, and significant
investments in reduction projects are continuing.
- However, two key factors limit the global impact
of these efforts - Global oil production increase leads to
associated gas production increase, offsetting
efforts to reduce gas flaring - Development of gas markets, gas infrastructure,
and flaring reduction projects often requires
collaborative rather than individual action
13Typical barriers to gas sector development
- Underdeveloped domestic market for gas and gas
products (LPG, CNG, fuel methanol, power etc) - Absence of / limited gas policies
- Limited institutional, legal and regulatory
framework for gas, including associated gas - Gas terms (or absence thereof) in existing oil
development agreements - Fiscal system
- Domestic gas and gas product pricing
- Infrastructure constraints and access
- Funding constraints
14Collaborative Action GGFR
- Started as an Initiative with Norwegian
Government and World Bank in 2001 - GGFR Public-Private Partnership was formed at the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg in August 2002 - GGFR includes governments from oil-producing
countries, state-owned and international oil
companies, OPEC, and the World Bank Group,
together accounting for over 70 of global
flaring - Objective is to support national governments and
the petroleum industry in their efforts to reduce
the flaring and venting of gas associated with
the extraction of crude oil - Still open for new members governments, national
oil companies, international oil companies,
industry organizations, etc.
15Current GGFR Public and Private Partners
- Countries/NOCs IOCs
- Algeria (Sonatrach) BP
- Angola ChevronTexaco
- Cameroon (SNH) ENI
- Chad ExxonMobil
- Ecuador Norsk Hydro
- Equatorial Guinea Shell
- Indonesia Statoil
- Khanty Mansiisk (Russia) Total
- Nigeria
- Donors Multilateral Organizations
- Canada The World Bank
- Norway OPEC
- UK (Foreign Commonwealth Office)
- USA NGOs
- Sahel
16GGFR Work Program
- Help each other in associated gas utilization
and further reduction of local and global flaring
through best practice identification, development
exchange in - Commercialization
- Consultations to identify and address associated
gas utilization barriers - Remote fields solutions
- Small scale gas use
- Regulations for (associated) gas sector
development - Identification and dissemination of regulatory
best practice - Contractual issues surrounding associated gas
- Global Gas Flaring Standards
- Common flaring standards and guidelines,
including measurement and reporting - Carbon Credits
- Capacity building including methodology for
flaring projects - Representative projects assistance with crediting
process
17Global Gas Flaring and Venting Reduction
Voluntary Standard
- GGFR announced the Global Gas Venting and Flaring
Reduction Voluntary Standard at the 2nd
International Gas Flaring Reduction Conference in
Algeria in May 2004, which - Provides framework for governments, companies,
and other key stakeholders to consult each other
and take complementary and supportive action - Encourages integrated approach including market
and infrastructure development,
commercialization, legal and fiscal regulations,
carbon credits - Aims to achieve global applicability and impact
by allowing for flexibility to local conditions
and balancing ambitious timescale with realistic
constraints. - Collaborative action of stakeholders will help
reduce barriers to associated gas utilization in
a country - Implementation of the Standard aims to reduce
venting and flaring significantly within 5 to 10
years
18Key Concepts of the Standard
- Voluntary and performance based rather than
prescriptive - Initial Goal with focus on large sources that can
make a significant difference early - Collaborative action and implementation planning
through - Identification and consultation of key
stakeholders - Potential expansion of flare reduction project
boundaries to include other fields / operations
/ infrastructure / customers in region for
consultation - Consideration of range of options to enhance the
feasibility of associated gas utilization (tool
box) - Producer driven Associated Gas Recovery Plans and
Government driven Country Implementation Plan. - Ultimate Goal for longer term continuous
improvement - Measurement of remaining flaring and venting, and
public reporting - Recommended Timeline for consultation, planning
and implementation
19International Best Practice A collaborative
approach to gas flaring reduction - Alberta
- Clean Air Strategic Alliance (CASA)
- Multi-stakeholder process, including industry,
environmental organizations and government - Key is to build consensus on flaring solutions
- Objectives
- Eliminate routine gas flaring
- Reduce volumes of gas flared
- Improve the efficiency of flares
20Alberta - Results
- Evaluation of each flaring site
- Decision tree works well
- Economic flare gas utilization identified
- Industry reduction targets
- 38 reduction - year-end 2000 (Target 15)
- 53 reduction - year-end 2001 (Target 25)
- 62 reduction - year-end 2002 (Target 50)
- 70 reduction - year-end 2003 (No target est.)
- Clear objective for flare reduction actions
- Improved public confidence in process
21Associated gas utilization and domestic market
development Recommendations (1)
- Establish local public-private partnership(s)
between relevant government parties and other key
stakeholders including local communities, and
take the lead in collaborative action (with World
Bank / GGFR facilitation if and when required),
on some or all of - Formulation, implementation and transparency of
(associated) gas, gas pricing and flaring
reduction policies, incl. implementation of GGFR
Standard - Domestic market development, especially
Gas-to-Power reform, consistent with gas sector
reform, including pilot projects - LPG production, storage, transportation and
distribution, including pilot projects
22Associated gas utilization and domestic market
development Recommendations (2)
- Establishing project synergies especially between
those gas utilization projects that are more
difficult / less attractive on individual basis - Financing solutions for infrastructure projects
to expand domestic market (for example, gas
trunk-lines and main electricity transmission
infrastructure), including Government
facilitation of financing (for example, through
public-private financing initiatives) - Small scale gas utilization and power supply,
including regional pilot projects (this would
require a local collaboration task force), and
technical assistance/facilitation/capacity
building - Carbon credits for emission reduction projects,
including institutional requirements and pilot
projects
23Conclusions
- Radical new policies are required to reduce
energy poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, and
domestic market reforms to create conditions that
attract investment is vital - Flaring in Africa alone could produce more than
twice the level of current power consumption in
Sub-Saharan Africa (excluding South Africa) - Local public-private partnerships that
collaborate on a combination of policy and
projects can be very effective in achieving major
change in the medium term
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- Thank you for your attention