Oil & Gas
Shaping the Age of Gas
And in my remarks today, I want to focus mainly on the long term trends – because in an industry with cycle times measured in decades, our decisions need to be guided by these trends as much as day by day events. And despite the current turbulence, I see three reasons why it is credible to talk of a coming age of gas. First, the abundance of gas resources will help to ensure that there is sufficient energy to meet the world’s needs. Second, the world wants energy security, and gas can help with that too. And third, the world needs its energy to be sustainable, and gas has a unique role to play in that regard.Three ‘S’s – sufficiency, security and sustainability. Three reasons why I believe gas will become the world’s number one fuel during this century. I’d like to expand a little on each of those three points.
SUFFICIENCY
Starting with sufficiency, the challenge is that the world’s energy demand is projected to grow by around 35 per cent by 2035. Almost all the growth – about 95 per cent – comes from non-OECD countries, led by China and India, as they continue to industrialize. Our Outlook indicates that they will use around an extra four billion tonnes of oil equivalent compared to today – or perhaps I should say 180 trillion cubic feet of gas equivalent – given where we are.
Either way, those numbers are hard to visualise. But I always think about what they mean for individuals and communities. Electricity coming to a village. People riding scooters to work. Power and light for clinics and schools. Irrigation for farmers. Access to computers, to hot water, to refrigeration. New opportunities. New possibilities.
A lot of that comes courtesy of gas. Amid all the debate, let’s not forget the good that our product does. And it has the potential to go on doing so – because there is more than enough gas to meet demand.
Over the past decade the world has consumed around 30 trillion cubic meters of gas – but reserves today are around 30 trillion cubic meters more than they were in 2004. In other words, the industry has replaced what was used and then added the same amount again. Recent history tells a story of new frontiers and new sources of supply opening up all around the world – shale gas, tight gas, deepwater gas.
We expect the shares of gas, oil and coal to converge around 2035, with each contributing around 27 per cent of demand. It’s what I like to call the rule of 27s. The other fifth of the demand is met by non-fossil fuels. There we see renewables growing strongly from its low base.
Gas is on a clear upward trajectory. It’s the fastest growing of the fossil fuels. This shows where we expect the additional gas to come from. Around half the increase comes from non-OECD conventional supplies, mainly from the Middle East and Russia. The other half largely comes from shale production in North America. And on a very long timeframe, this may only be the start.
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