Oil
Oil remained the world’s leading fuel, with a 32.9 percent share of global energy consumption. Global oil consumption increased by 1.4 million barrels per day (1.4 percent), which was just above the historical average. But oil production did not grow as fast last year; it grew by just 0.6 percent, or 560,000 barrels a day. The shale boom from hydraulic fracturing in the United States was largely able to offset disruptions to production elsewhere in the world. U.S. oil production increased by 1.1 million barrels per day in 2013—the largest increase in the world. According to Christof Rühl, BP's chief economist, for the past 3 years, oil-price volatility was at its lowest level since the early 1970s.[ii] China’s net imports of oil totaled 7 million barrels per day in 2013—the largest net imports in the world, surpassing that of the United States. Global proved reserves of oil increased to 1,687.9 billion barrels at the end of 2013, almost enough to equal 50 years of global consumption at current rates.
Coal
Coal consumption grew by 3 percent in 2013, below the 10-year average of 3.9 percent, but enough to make it the world’s fastest-growing fossil fuel. Coal’s share of global primary energy consumption reached 30.1 percent, the highest since 1970. China accounted for 67 percent of global growth in coal, which provided 67.5 percent of China’s total energy demand in 2013. The country’s carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel consumption grew by 4.2 percent, or
358 million metric tons.[iii] India’s coal consumption in 2013 was the second largest coal use increase on record, accounting for 21 percent of global growth. Global coal production increased by 0.8 percent in 2013, with Indonesia’s coal production increasing by 9.4 percent, Australia’s coal production increasing by 7.3 percent, and China’s coal production, the largest in the world, increasing by 1.2 percent. China is now consuming 4.2 times as much coal as the United States, using over half of all coal consumed in the world.
Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2014, page 34,
Natural Gas
Natural gas consumption in 2013 accounted for 23.7 percent of world primary energy use, increasing just 1.4 percent, below its historical average of 2.6 percent. In North America, natural gas consumption increased 2.7 percent in 2013—the only region where natural gas consumption increased above its historic average. Hydraulic fracturing provided new, inexpensive supplies of natural gas in the United States, but elsewhere natural gas was relatively expensive causing natural gas demand growth to fall below average on a global scale and spurring some countries (e.g. Germany) to build coal plants in lieu of gas plants to provide reliable baseload power and to back up intermittent renewable plants. LNG's share of the global natural gas trade declined slightly in 2013 to 31.4 percent as LNG trade grew by just 1.8 percent, below the historical average of 5.2 percent. Global proved natural gas reserves increased to 185.7 trillion cubic meters, enough to meet over 50 years of global consumption at current rates.
Nuclear Energy
Global nuclear output grew by 0.9 percent, the first increase since 2010. Nuclear power accounted for 4.4 percent of global energy consumption, the smallest share since 1984. Japan’s nuclear output dropped 18.6 percent in 2013 and has declined by 95 percent since 2010 due to the accident at Fukushima from the tsunami that occurred in that year. Other countries with declining nuclear production in 2013 were South Korea, Ukraine, Spain, Russia, and Germany. The United States remains the world’s largest nuclear generating nation, and is responsible for one third of the world’s production.
Hydroelectric Power
Hydroelectric power grew at 2.9 percent, accounting for 6.7 percent of global energy consumption. The Asia-Pacific region accounted for 78 percent of the growth, led by China and India. China’s hydroelectric output is roughly 3? times that of the United States. In Brazil, drought reduced output by 7 percent and in Finland, Norway, and Sweden, drought reduced output by a combined 14.5 percent.
Non Hydroelectric Renewable Energy
Non-hydroelectric renewable energy, both in power generation and in transportation, accounted for 2.7 percent of global consumption—a record—up from 0.8 percent a decade ago. Renewable energy used in power generation increased by 16.3 percent and accounted for a 5.3 percent share of global power generation, which was another record. According to BP, China had the largest incremental increase in renewables, followed by the United States, while renewable growth in Germany, Spain and Italy was below average. Globally, wind energy increased 20.7 percent and accounted for more than half of renewable power generation growth and solar power generation increased by 33 percent, but from a smaller base than wind. Global biofuels production grew by 6.1 percent (80,000 barrels per day of oil equivalent), due to increases in Brazil of 16.8 percent and in the United States of 4.6 percent.
Conclusion
While the Obama Administration has been working to reduce consumption of coal in the United States, other countries are increasing their consumption of coal to supply areas without power and to fuel their economic growth. The President’s plans will eliminate thousands of jobs throughout the economy by increasing electricity rates as utilities are forced to spend hundreds of billion dollars in compliance costs. Even Germany is building new coal to supply reliable baseload power to its citizens and its industries and to back-up the country’s intermittent renewable plants.
While the Administration has been busy creating the impression that coal is on its way out as a fuel for meeting the world’s energy needs, its consumption has been growing significantly. The world is in need of the wealth-creating energy that the United States and other OECD nations used to develop their economies. Judging by the direction of primary energy consumption in the world, it appears that this Administration’s policies are on the wrong side of history.
(i) Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2014,
BP
[ii] Global Oil Consumption Outpaces Production, June 16, 2014,
Wall Street Journal
[iii] Coal’s Share of World Energy Demand at Highest Since 1970, June 16, 2014,
Bloomberg