World to Stay Hooked on Fossil Fuels - IEA
UK: November 8, 2007
LONDON - The world will stay hooked on fossil fuels up to 2030, although
oil's share of global energy demand will fall slightly, while coal use
rises, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday.
In its annual World Energy Outlook, the IEA predicted fossil fuels would
account for 84 percent of the overall increase in energy demand between 2005
and 2030 when consumption will reach 17.7 billion tonnes of oil equivalent
(toe), up from 11.4 billion toe in 2005.
Oil will remain the single largest source of fuel, but its share in primary
global demand will fall from 35 percent to 32 percent.
Continuing the spectacular growth of the past few years, coal sees the
biggest increase in demand in absolute terms, jumping by 73 percent between
2005 and 2030 and pushing its share of total energy demand up from 25
percent to 28 percent.
China and India will be responsible for much of this rise.
The share of natural gas, a much less polluting fuel than coal, rises more
modestly from 21 to 22 percent and nuclear generation, which does not
produce any emissions of carbon dioxide, is expected to shrink from 6
percent of the mix to 5 percent.
Hydro electricity holds steady at 2 percent, biomass and waste declines from
10 percent of the energy mix to 9 percent and other renewables creep up to 2
percent from 1 percent.
Primary energy demand is demand for energy as a raw material to produce
heat, refined oil products or electricity.
For electricity generation, coal remains the main source, with its share of
total generation rising from 40 percent in 2005 to 45 percent in 2030.
Oil-fired generation eases from 7 percent of electricity production to 3
percent, while gas generation rises from 20 percent to 23 percent.
Nuclear electricity accounts for 9 percent of power generation by 2030, down
from 15 percent in 2005, and hydro-electric power decreases its share from
16 percent to 14 percent.
Biomass and waste should account for 2 percent of power generation by 2030,
up from 1 percent in 2005, and the share of wind and other renewables rises
to 4 percent of power generation, also from 1 percent, the IEA said.
For further coverage of the IEA World Energy Outlook double click on
[ID:nL06399840] (Reporting by Barbara Lewis)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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