|
Printer-friendly page from Finfacts Ireland Business News - Click for the News Main Page - A service of the Finfacts Ireland Business and Finance Portal
|
|
|
China became world’s largest energy consumer in 2010; Global use in biggest annual jump since 1973
By Finfacts Team
Jun 9, 2011 - 4:58 AM
 |
China became the world’s largest energy consumer in 2010
overtaking the USA during a year which saw the rebound in the global economy
drive consumption higher and at a rate not seen since the aftermath of the
1973 oil price shocks.
Demand for all forms of energy grew strongly in 2010 and increases in fossil
fuel consumption suggest that global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from
energy use rose at their fastest rate since 1969.
The growth in energy consumption was broad-based, with both mature OECD
economies and non-OECD countries growing at above-average rates.
The figures come from the 60th annual
BP Statistical
Review of World Energy, which was published on Wednesday.
“There were both structural and cyclical factors at work,” said Bob Dudley,
BP chief executive. “The cyclical factor is reflected in the fact that
industrial production rebounded very sharply as the world recovered from the
global downturn. Structurally, the increase reflects the continuing rapid
economic growth in the developing world.
“I was in China a couple of weeks ago and I came away
with a very clear sense of how rigorously China is thinking about these
issues. Growth is by no means the only game in town. They want to maintain
social cohesion and they want to make their growth more sustainable. In sum,
they are worried about energy security and climate change - - just as we are.”
To address these concerns, “we can look to the markets, policy tools,
technology advances and not least to the growth of renewable energies to
allay these worries,” said Dudley.
“This year, we have seen that the global energy markets are resilient. In
the face of significant disruptions to the world’s energy system in Japan
and Libya, demand continues to be satisfied. Markets work and markets work
best when they are open and transparent.”
Overview
The strong rebound of global energy consumption in 2010
followed the recent global recession. Consumption growth reached 5.6%, the
highest rate since 1973. It increased strongly for all forms of energy and
in all regions. Total consumption of energy in 2010 easily surpassed the
pre-recession peak reached in 2008.
“Economic growth was led by the non-OECD economies which had suffered least
during the crisis. By year-end, economic activity for the world as a whole
exceeded pre-crisis levels driven by the so-called developing world,” said Christof Rühl, BP’s group chief economist.
Globally, energy consumption grew more rapidly than the economy, meaning
that the energy intensity of economic activity increased for a second
consecutive year. The data imply that global COO2 emissions from fossil fuel
consumption will also have grown strongly last year.
“Energy intensity - - the amount of energy used for one unit of GDP – grew at
the fastest rate since 1970. And so, when all the accounting is done, planet
Earth - - we all - - consumed more energy in 2010 than ever before,” said Rühl.
Demand in OECD countries grew by 3.5%, the strongest growth rate since 1984,
although the level of OECD consumption remains roughly in line with that
seen 10 years ago. Non-OECD consumption grew by 7.5% and was 63% above the
2000 level. Consumption growth accelerated in 2010 for all regions, and
growth was above average in all regions. Chinese energy consumption grew by
11.2%, and China surpassed the US as the world’s largest energy consumer.
Oil remains the world’s leading fuel, at 33.6% of global energy consumption,
but it continued to lose market share for the 11th consecutive year.
Global oil consumption grew by 2.7m barrels per
day (Mbpd), or 3.1%, the strongest growth since 2004. Rühl said: “The growth
rate was more than twice the ten-year average; it featured the first
increase in OECD oil consumption since 2005 and the largest volumetric
increase outside the OECD ever. China contributed the largest national
increment; its consumption rose by 860,000 bpd or 10.4%. The United States,
Russia, and Brazil also recorded large increments.”
The strong recovery in oil consumption was accompanied by strong growth in
production though the increase was not as large as the increase in
consumption. Growth was broadly split between OPEC and non-OPEC producers.
In OPEC, Nigeria and Qatar accounted for the largest increases. Among
non-OPEC producers, “China saw the largest increase in the country’s history
due to rising offshore output. Russia and the US also contributed
significantly, while Norway experienced the world’s largest production
decline,” said Rühl.
Oil prices remained in the $70-80 range for much of the year before rising
in the fourth quarter. With the OPEC production cuts implemented during the
global recession in 2008/09 still in place, and despite informal production
increases in the face of the strong recovery in consumption, average oil
prices for the year as a whole were the second-highest on record. However
due to the high prices, oil saw the weakest consumption growth among fossil
fuels last year.
Turning to natural gas, Rühl said: “Consumption rose
7.4%, the strongest volumetric gain on record. Non-OECD economies expanded
their share to over 51%; China solidified its role as Asia’s largest gas
market. But OECD markets grew rapidly too (6.4%, +93 billion cubic metres),
with consumption attaining all-time highs. Production rose 7.3%, also a
record increment. 31% of this global growth originated in the former Soviet
Union, followed by the Middle East.
“The shale gas revolution in the US and massive changes in LNG markets are
reshaping the world of natural gas,” said Rühl. Over the last five years,
global LNG supply grew by a cumulative 58% - -- three times faster than total
gas production. And last year, the supply of LNG expanded by an
unprecedented 22.6% (55 bcm).
Other fuels
Like all other fuels, coal
consumption growth was above average in 2010 - rising by 7.6% (250m tonnes of oil equivalent,
mtoe). The shift toward non-OECD consumption continued, with China and India
increasing coal use by 10.1% (157 mtoe) and 10.8% (27 mtoe). OECD coal
consumption also rose by 5.2% (54.1 mtoe), the fastest rate for 31 years and
hard on the heels of a decline of more than 10% in 2009. Among all the
fossil fuels, coal consumption grew the fastest.
For the first time this year the Review includes data on renewables other
than hydroelectricity. Biofuels production grew by 13.8%, or about 240,00
bpd, largely in the US and Brazil. Renewables in power generation -- including
wind, solar, geothermal energy and commercial biomass - - grew by 15.5%, with
OECD countries accounting for most of the growth though China’s output from renewables grew by 75% and accounted for the second-largest increment after
the US. Combined, these sources met 1.8% of the world’s energy needs, a
market share which has tripled in the past decade. “Over the last five
years, their contribution to world primary energy growth was almost 10% –
that is, higher than the contribution of petroleum-based products,” said Rühl.
Hydroelectricity, in absolute terms, saw its biggest increase ever. “2010
was actually the wettest year since 1900,” said Rühl. Nuclear output grew by
2%, weaker than other fuels but still an above-average growth rate.
| Energy in numbers 1951 |
 |
|
 |
| First Anglo-Iranian Oil Company's
"Statistical Review" |
|
1952 |
 |
| Distributed to |
|
8 people |
 |
| Number of pages |
|
6 (plus one chart) |
 |
| Middle East oil prices, 1951
(quoted in the original "Review") |
|
$1.67-$2.41/barrel |
| Energy in numbers 2011 |
 |
|
 |
| Global energy consumption growth;
the strongest growth since 1973 |
|
+5.6% |
 |
| China's share of global energy
consumption; the world's largest |
|
20.3% |
 |
| Consumption growth in OECD
countries, the strongest since 1984 |
|
+3.5% |
 |
| Non-OECD consumption growth, 2010 |
|
+7.5% |
 |
| Non-OECD level compared to 2000
|
|
+63% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| Dated Brent 2010 average
($/barrel) |
|
79.50 |
 |
| Growth in global oil consumption;
the weakest among fossil fuels |
|
+3.1% |
 |
| Global oil consumption (million
barrels per day (bpd)) |
|
87.4 |
 |
| OECD oil consumption growth
(+480,000 bpd) |
|
+0.9% |
 |
| Non-OECD oil consumpton growth
(2.2m bpd) |
|
+5.5% |
 |
| China oil consumption growth
(860,000 bpd) |
|
+10.4% |
 |
| OPEC oil production growth
(+960,000 bpd) |
|
+2.5% |
 |
| Global refining capacity growth
(720,000 bpd) |
|
+0.8% |
 |
| Non-OECD refining throughputs
(exceeding OECD for the first time) |
|
37.5m bpd |
 |
| Chinese energy consumption |
|
+11.2% |
 |
| Global biofuels* production growth
(+240,000 bpd) |
|
+13.8% |
 |
| US biofuels production growth
(+140,000 bpd) |
|
+17% |
 |
| Brazil biofuels production growth
(+50,000 bpd) |
|
+11.5% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| Natural gas consumption growth;
the strongest since 1984 |
|
+7.4% |
 |
| Highest volumetric increase in gas
consumption, US |
|
+5.6% |
 |
| Asia gas consumption growth... |
|
+12.6% |
 |
| ...led by Chinese gas consumption
growth |
|
+21.8% |
 |
| Global gas production growth |
|
+7.3% |
 |
| Qatar gas production growth |
|
+30.7% |
 |
| Russia gas production growth
(highest volumetric growth) |
|
+11.6% |
 |
| US gas production growth (the
world's largest producer) |
|
+4.7% |
 |
| LNG share of global gas trade |
|
30.5% |
 |
| Pipeline export growth (led by
Russia) |
|
+5.4% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| Coal consumption, highest since
2003 |
|
+7.6% |
 |
| Coal’s share of global energy
consumption (highest since 1970) |
|
29.6% |
 |
| Coal’s share of global energy
consumption in 2000 |
|
+25.6% |
 |
| China share of global coal
consumption |
|
48.2% |
 |
| China coal consumption growth |
|
+10.1% |
 |
| Global coal production growth |
|
+6.3% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| Hydroelectric output |
|
+5.3% |
 |
| Nuclear output |
|
+2% |
 |
| France growth in nuclear output |
|
+4.4% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| Renewables** share of global
energy consumption (0.6% in 2000) |
|
1.8% |
 |
| Renewable energy used in power
generation, growth |
|
+15.5% |
 |
| Wind energy production |
|
+22.7% |
 |
| |
|
|
 |
| UK growth in energy consumption
(the strongest since 1996) |
|
+2.7% |
 |
| UK oil production, 2nd largest
volumetric decline after Norway |
|
–7.7% |
 |
| UK gas production, 2nd largest
volumetric decline after Canada |
|
–4.3% |
 |
| UK renewables (in power
generation) growth (world growth +15.5%) |
|
+4.5% |
 |
| UK coal consumption growth rate
(world growth +7.6%) |
|
+5.2% |
 |
| UK nuclear growth (world growth
+2%) |
|
–10.1% |
 |
| |
|
|
*Biofuels for transport is
included in oil consumption and is not included in 'renewables'
for purposes of this Review unless otherwise noted
**Renewables in power generation and biofuels |
|
|
© Copyright 2011 by Finfacts.com
|