Title: Dr' Fatih Birol
1WORLDENERGYINVESTMENTOUTLOOK
- Dr. Fatih Birol
- Chief Economist
- Head, Economic Analysis Division
- International Energy Agency / OECD
2Global Strategic Challenges
- Security of energy supplies
- Threat of environmental damage caused by energy
use - Uneven access of the worlds population to modern
energy - Investment in energy-supply infrastructure
3Global Energy Investment Outlook
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7Global Oil Investment
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12Investment Uncertainties Challenges
13Uncertainties Challenges
- Opportunities and incentives to invest
- Oil prices and rates of return
- Investment regime and risk
- Access to reserves
- Role of NOCs
- Restrictions on foreign investment
- Licensing, fiscal and commercial terms
- Environmental regulations and ethical concerns
- Demand-side impact
- Impact on access to reserves and drilling costs
- Remaining resources and technology
- Iraqi production prospects
- Middle East production and investment policies
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17Restricted Middle East Oil Investment Scenario
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20 Oil Concluding Remarks
- Global investment of 3 trillion needed in
2001-2030 - Investment more sensitive to decline rate than
rate of demand growth most investment needed
just to maintain current production level - Major uncertainties about opportunities and
incentives to invest, notably - Access to reserves and production policies OPEC
(and Iraq) - Oil prices
- Production costs and investment risks
- Lower investment in Middle East oil would raise
global investment needs, lower OPEC revenues
harm global economy - Enhanced consumer-producer dialogue to help
facilitate capital flows
21Natural Gas Investment Outlook
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27Gas Investment Uncertainties
- Balance of risk and return price is key
- Complexity of financing very large-scale projects
especially in developing countries - Access to reserves and fiscal regime most new
investment will be private - Impact of market reforms on investment risk
long-term contracts will remain necessary
These factors could lead to shortfall in
investment, supply bottlenecks and higher prices
in some cases
28Electricity Investment Outlook
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30Average Age of Power Plants in the OECD
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32Electricity Investment Uncertaintiesin US
- Investment needs will increase over next 3
decades - Demand growth of 1.6
- Many old plants including most nuclear reactors
will be retired - Shift to higher unit cost renewables
- Tightening reserve margins
- Gas prices and capital costs of coal stations
renewables are key drivers of future investment
in generation - Wind power will be primary renewable source
calling for investment in voltage regulation
network reinforcement - New capacity investment may be delayed as
investors wait to see what environmental policies
including possible climate action are enacted - Higher investment costs for new capacity may
delay decommissioning of old plants and raise
emissions
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36Energy Investment Challenge
- Total investment requirements are modest relative
to world GDP, but challenge differs by region - Energy and financial resources are sufficient,
but increasing competition for capital and higher
risk - Capital needs are largest for electricity
- Half total energy investment is needed in
developing countries where financing will be
hardest - Production accounts for the bulk of investment
more than half just to replace old capacity
37Broader Policy Implications Wake-Up Call for
Governments
- Increasing emphasis on creating right enabling
conditions and lowering barriers to investment - Less direct intervention as lender or owner
- Governments should monitor and assess the need to
adjust regulatory reforms in network industries - Policymakers need to ensure basic principles of
good governance are applied and respected
including cost-reflective pricing - Fiscal and regulatory incentives to develop
advanced technologies carbon sequestration,
hydrogen, fuel cells, advanced nuclear reactors,
etc. could speed their deployment and
dramatically alter energy investment patterns and
requirements to 2030