Sobering Outlook from the IEA - Analyst Blog
12 November 2011 - 2:58AM
Zacks
Not all the important news is centered on Greece and Italy. The
International Energy Agency, or IEA, this week released its World
Energy Outlook. The IEA is not some wild-eyed "peak oil/global
warming" fringe group. They are about as mainstream and staid a
group as you are going to find.
The bullet points below come from the fact sheet associated with
the report (see here). I comment on the implications, particularly
the investment implications after each bullet point.
- Major events of the last year have had an impact on
short- and medium-term energy trends, but have done little to
quench the world’s increasing thirst for energy in the long
term. The level and pattern of energy use worldwide varies
markedly across the three scenarios in this year’s World Energy
Outlook (WEO-2011), which differ according to assumptions
about government policies on energy and climate change. The New
Policies Scenario is the central scenario of WEO-2011. It assumes
that recent government policy commitments are implemented in a
cautious manner.
Perhaps the only silver lining of the worldwide economic weakness
has been that it has slowed the growth of world energy demand,
particularly in the developed world. However, growth has continued
at a pretty rapid rate in the developing world, especially the
BRICs. China has slowed to only 9.0% growth or so, and is likely to
continue growing at that sort of rate, but off of a bigger base.
India, Brazil and countries like Indonesia are all in very high
incremental energy demand phases of their economic development.
China is likely to be the world’s largest auto market again this
year. The difference between new auto sales in a place like China
is that each new car represents incremental growth in the auto
fleet. In the U.S. the auto market is largely a replacement market.
Since new cars are more fuel efficient than old cars, that means
higher new car sales here actually lowers world oil demand, but
higher new car sales in China means higher world oil demand.
- In the New Policies Scenario, world primary demand for
energy increases by one-third between 2010 and 2035 and
energy-related CO2 emissions increase by 20%, following a
trajectory consistent with a long-term rise in the average global
temperature in excess of 3.5°C. A lower rate of global
economic growth in the short term would make only a marginal
difference to longer-term energy and climate trends.
The good news is that the IEA sees substantial progress on
increasing energy efficiency and the development of non-fossil fuel
energy sources over the next quarter century, the spread between
the growth in energy consumption and CO2 emissions is
significant.
Coming up with an increase of one third in world energy supplies is
going to be a huge challenge. A 3.5 degree Centigrade rise in world
average temperature is HUGE. It is about half the difference
between the current temperature and what it was at the end of the
last Ice Age. Since the end of the last ice age, apx. 10,000 years
ago, sea levels have risen by about 300 feet. Even a 30 foot rise
in global sea levels would put many of the largest cities in the
world under water.
Shorter term, that will mean more adverse weather developments, and
thus many more catastrophic losses, for the Insurance Industry. If
they are able to raise their premiums enough to compensate, then
that will act as a major tax on growth. If they are unable
to...well, let's just say you don’t want to be invested in the
industry, especially the re-insurance firms that will bear the
brunt of the early claims. Berkshire Hathaway
(BRK.B) would be vulnerable, as would many of the smaller players
such as ACE (ACE) and XL
(XL).
- The dynamics of energy markets are determined more and
more by the emerging economies. Over the next 25 years,
90% of the projected growth in global energy demand comes from
non-OECD economies; China alone accounts for more than 30%,
consolidating its position as the world’s largest energy consumer.
In 2035, China consumes nearly 70% more energy than the United
States, the second-largest consumer, even though, by then,
per-capita energy consumption in China is still less than half the
level in the United States. The rates of growth in energy
consumption in India, Indonesia, Brazil and the Middle East are
even faster than in China. Emerging economies also dominate the
expansion of supply: the world will rely increasingly on OPEC oil
production as it grows to reach more than half of the global total
in 2035. Non-OECD countries account for more than 70% of global gas
production in 2035, focused in the largest existing gas producers,
including Russia, the Caspian and Qatar.
The growth of energy demand in the Middle East is significant. One
has to assume that any government, democratic or despotic, will
favor domestic consumption over exports, leading to lower available
exports. This will lead to a biding war between China and the rest
of the world for the available exports.
If we start to move towards using natural gas as a transportation
fuel, then the U.S. might surprise to the upside as a source of
natural gas production given our huge shale gas resources. On the
other hand, they seem very comfortable about the ability of
countries in the Middle East to be able to increase their
production.
I am not nearly as confident about that. Half of all of Saudi
Arabia’s production currently comes from a single oil field, and
that field has been in production since the 1950’s. There is no
comparable oil field left to be put into production.
- World demand grows for all energy sources. The
share of fossil fuels in global primary energy consumption falls
slightly from 81% in 2010 to 75% in 2035. Natural gas is the only
fossil fuel to increase its share in the global mix over the period
to 2035. Absolute growth in natural gas demand is similar to that
of oil and coal combined. Oil demand increases by 15% and is driven
by transport demand. Coal demand, dictated largely by emerging
economies, increases for around the next ten years but then
stabilizes, ending around 17% higher than 2010.
This should be very good news for the oil service industry. The
easy oil has been tapped already, and the new fields are in more
remote areas and much deeper in the earth. That means that the oil
service intensity of each well is likely to rise. In other words,
firms like Schlumberger (SLB),
Halliburton (HAL) and Baker
Hughes (BHI) are secular growth companies. The increasing
cost of new incremental wells will put a floor under the price of
existing oil supplies. Any oil firm with existing (and lower cost)
reserves is likely to benefit enormously. However, reserves are
likely to be replaced at a much higher cost than the reserves they
replace.
The future also looks very bright for the mining equipment
companies such as Joy Global (JOYG) and
Caterpillar (CAT) due to the rise in demand for
coal over the next decade. As most of the rise in coal demand will
happen in the emerging markets, U.S. railroads are likely to
benefit as we export more coal and the rails ship it to the ports.
This would be a big offset to the possible problems on the
insurance side for Berkshire.
- In the power sector, nuclear generation grows by about
70%, led by China, Korea and India. Renewable energy
technologies, led by hydropower and wind, account for half of the
new capacity installed to meet growing demand. Overall, modern
renewables grow faster than any other energy form in relative
terms, but in absolute terms total supply is still not close to the
level of any single fossil fuel in 2035.
One has to question that sort of rise in worldwide nuclear energy
over the next quarter century in the wake of the Japanese disaster.
The tide in Europe, for example, seems to have decisively turned
against the use of nukes. Germany is on a path to eliminate all of
its nuke generation over that period. Renewable sources (especially
excluding hydropower) make up a tiny fraction of world energy
output now, so it is a rapid growth off a small base situation. At
this point it looks like the U.S. and Europe have lost the race to
China to be the primary supplier of renewable power.
- Large-scale investment in future energy supply is
needed. In the New Policies Scenario, $38 trillion in
global investment in energy-supply infrastructure is required from
2011 to 2035, an average of $1.5 trillion per year. Two-thirds of
this is required in non-OECD countries. The power sector claims
nearly $17 trillion of the total investment. Oil and gas combined
require nearly $20 trillion, increasing to reflect higher costs and
a need for more upstream investment in the medium and long term.
Coal and biofuels account for the remaining investment.
That is a lot of money, about 10% of U.S. GDP each year. Again,
firms like Halliburton look like great secular growth stories. The
big engineering and construction firms such as
Fluor (FLR) are also poised to benefit from the
construction of those power projects.
- The energy world becomes more inter-connected and more
focused on Asia. More than half of world oil consumption
is traded across regions in 2035, increasing by around 30% in
absolute terms compared with today. Trade in natural gas nearly
doubles, with gas from Russia and the Caspian region going
increasingly to Asia. India becomes the largest coal importer by
around 2020, but China remains the determining factor in global
coal markets.
There are some very big pipelines that will have to be built for
Russia to supply China with that amount of gas.
- Policy action to curb demand for energy-security and
climate reasons, and the ability to develop new supplies, will be
critical to the long-term outlook for international oil and gas
markets. Global oil demand in the New Policies Scenario
increases slowly to 2035, reaching 99 mb/d – up from 87 mb/d in
2010. Oil’s share of global primary energy use nonetheless drops
from 33% today to 27% in 2035. Growth in demand comes mostly from
non-OECD Asia, whilst OECD demand falls. The crude oil price rises
to $120/barrel (in year-2010 dollars) in 2035.
Given the rise in demand forecasted, this increase in the price of
oil looks very optimistic to me -- almost flat in real terms with
Brent crude trading at about $110 (and Brent, not WTI, is the world
price). Despite sustained very high energy prices, between 2005 and
2010 world oil production has only increased by 0.7%. That is a
total figure, not per year.
The annual growth in production to meet that demand is 0.52% per
year. That is a major acceleration. Just where do they think that
production is likely to come from. Remember, that we have to find
substantial new fields each year just to keep up with the depletion
of existing fields.
On the other hand, there is a limit to the price of oil that the
world -- especially the developed world -- economies can stand
before they start to turn down. As the U.S. has to import the vast
bulk of its oil, that is not good news for the trade deficit. If we
were to aggressively move towards the use of natural gas as a
transportation fuel we would be in much better shape.
ACE LIMITED (ACE): Free Stock Analysis Report
BERKSHIRE HTH-B (BRK.B): Free Stock Analysis Report
CATERPILLAR INC (CAT): Free Stock Analysis Report
HALLIBURTON CO (HAL): Free Stock Analysis Report
JOY GLOBAL INC (JOYG): Free Stock Analysis Report
SCHLUMBERGER LT (SLB): Free Stock Analysis Report
XL GROUP PLC (XL): Free Stock Analysis Report
Zacks Investment Research
Joy Global (NASDAQ:JOYG)
Historical Stock Chart
From Oct 2024 to Nov 2024
Joy Global (NASDAQ:JOYG)
Historical Stock Chart
From Nov 2023 to Nov 2024