UNECE Energy Week Geneva. in Energy Security



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UNECE Energy Week Geneva Investing in Energy Security Committee on Sustainable Energy and related Meetings Wednesday 28 November 2007 Special Session: Investing in and Financing the Hydrocarbon Sector to Enhance Global Energy Security J.-A. Vinois Head of Unit Energy policy and security of supply,, DG TREN European Commission 1

Investing in and Financing the Hydrocarbon Sector to Enhance Global Energy Security Outline: The EU s energy challenges An Energy Policy for Europe The EU Internal Market The development of indigenous resources Technological Developments The EU s External Energy Policy 2

The EU s energy challenges (1) Increasing demand, notably for electricity (1.5-2% p.a.) Declining indigenous production of oil, gas and coal Increasing imports, mainly from Norway, Russia, Algeria and the Middle East Major investment needs Climate challenge 3

The EU s energy challenges (2) Energy investment needs EU-27 INVESTMENT NEEDS up to 2030: 1.79 trillion RES-H&C 5% Coal 1% Gas 12% Oil 5% Electricity 77% Generation 65% Transmission 8% Distribution 27% Source:EUROSTAT 4

The EU s energy challenges (3) Business as usual is not sustainable 2000 100 1750 Nuclear 14,2% Renewabl es 6,7% Others 0,2% Solid fuels 17,7% 1500 1250 1000 750 500 250 Energy demand and carbon intensity 75 50 25 Natural gas 24,6% 2005 ~ 80% fossil fuel Source: EUROSTAT Crude oil and petroleum products 36,7% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 0 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 Import dependency total oil natural gas solids 2000 2010 2020 2030 5 0

An Energy Policy for Europe The key drivers 3x20% by 2020 20% by 2020 reduction in EU GHG emissions compared to 1990 20% by 2020 reduction in energy consumption compared to baseline projection - EFFICIENCY 20% by 2020 - binding contribution of RENEWABLES to EU energy consumption BIO-FUELS Min 10% binding E-ELECTRICITYELECTRICITY MS binding choice HEATING & COOLING MS binding choice NATIONAL TARGETS and ACTION PLANS 6

Creation of an attractive open internal market The features: 500 million consumers having the choice of changing electricity or gas supplier (since 1/07/2007) Liquid, predictable and stable market Common regulatory framework Level playing field Clear role for each energy player: supplier, carrier, regulator, consumer The aim: To integrate 27 national markets into one single market accessible to all players in order to ensure competitive, secure and sustainable energy supply 7

Creation of a European grid (1) Updating of Trans-European Energy Networks guidelines defining priority axes for electricity and gas including connections from the main supplying regions (2006) Need to develop strong and dense interconnections in all directions (East-West, West-East, North-South, South-North) Need to complete a European grid supporting the internal market and accommodating renewable energies 8

Creation of a European grid (2) Fundamental importance of diversification of routes, sources and suppliers Eg LNG terminals, Southern Corridor Possible revision of TEN-E E guidelines to include oil pipelines and CO2 infrastructure (Commission proposal by 2008) Recent appointment of European Coordinators on difficult cross border projects e.g. Nabucco (NG3 Gas corridor) 9

Ensuring the development of indigenous resources (1) EU-27 ORIGIN OF GAS EU-27 ORIGIN OF OIL ALGERIA 13% RUSSIA 29% EU 37% NORWAY 17% EU-27 ORIGIN OF COAL IRAN 5% LIBYA 8% SAUDI ARABIA 9% Others 10% EU 18% NORWAY 13% RUSSIA 26% RUSSIA 8% SOUTH AFRICA 13% EU 54% Source: European Commission, EUROSTAT 10

Ensuring the development of indigenous resources (2) Importance of the Directive 94/22 on the conditions for granting and using authorisations for the prospection, exploration and production of hydrocarbons Current high oil prices are a strong incentive to explore expensive EU resources A comprehensive renewables policy is fundamental hydro, geothermal, tidal, photovoltaic, wind onshore and offshore, solar 11

Case Study: Indigenous hydrocarbon production in the North Sea (3) The North Sea developments were possible thanks to: Stable legislation and tax regimes Open, transparent and well functioning markets Remarkable advances in technology Total R&D expenditure was ca. 15 billion EU supported with ca. 1,5 billion Costs were significantly reduced and recovery factors increased (ie( 39% in 1990 to 49% in 2005) 12

Technological Developments Increase in EU funds to support technologies relevant to policy objectives 2.4 billion for non nuclear energy (2007-2013) but not for oil and gas. Major focus on Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) support for 10-12 demonstration plants up to 2015 to demonstrate technical and commercial feasibility by 2020 Strategic Energy Technology Plan - adopted on 22 November 2007 13

External Energy Policy (1) Development of a common external policy: single voice Negotiation of a post-kyoto agreement (starting in Bali Dec 2007) Developing multilateral agreements to create the right trade and investment conditions in the field of energy WTO, Energy Charter Treaty Promotion of an International Platform on Energy Efficiency with G20 and IEA 14

With producer countries: External Energy Policy (2) Dialogues with producer, transit and consumer countries Aim - development of mutual understanding on the evolution of supply and demand and on subjects of mutual interest (energy policy, renewables,, energy efficiency) Norway, part of the European Economic Area Russia: EU-Russia dialogue, working groups on market developments, scenarios and forecasts, energy efficiency OPEC: joint studies on refining and financial markets, energy policies Gulf Cooperation Council: energy experts group, FTA? 15

External Energy Policy (3) Dialogues with producer, transit and consumer countries With producer countries: Baku Process: Black and Caspian Sea dialogue Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan: Memoranda of Understanding concluded or to come Euro-Med: Euromed energy markets, Euromed ministers to endorse priority projects of common interest to be implemented in 2008-2013 Algeria: Strategic Energy Partnership under development Egypt: develop energy relations at both technical and political level Africa: Energy Partnership (Dec 2007) 16

External Energy Policy (3) Dialogues with producer, transit and consumer countries With transit countries - Energy Community Treaty, Turkey, Ukraine, Belarus (at technical level), Moldova With consumer countries US, China, India, Canada, Japan, Brazil, Argentina, ASEAN, Mercosur Development of a partnership on Carbon Capture and Storage Norway, US, China, India, South Africa, Canada International Initiatives IEA, JODI, IEF, Participation in the Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership of the World Bank and the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative 17

Concluding Remarks Energy security is a common challenge which needs to be addressed through Increased energy efficiency Transition to diversified, lower-carbon energy mix including renewables An efficient infrastructure network Open, competitive markets Dialogues between all players in the energy game (suppliers, transit countries, consumers) Multilateral agreements Full transparency concerning reserves in order to achieve working interdependence 18

Investing in and Financing the Hydrocarbon Sector to Enhance Global Energy Security Thank you for your attention Documents on the climate and energy package are available on: http://ec.europa.eu/energy/energy_policy/index_en.htm 19