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Climate change and energy security BIICL Annual Conference 2010 11th June 2010 Professor Julia King CBE FREng Aston University Birmingham Member of the Committee on Climate Change ● Climate change: why are we worried? ● Global and national targets ● UK – energy use and climate change ● Energy security and climate change mitigation ● Conclusions The impacts of climate change ● Business as usual: a high probability of global average temperature rise in excess of 4o, possibly as early as 2060 ● Europe 8o warmer,12o on hottest day ● North America 10 – 12o warmer: Toronto, Chicago, New York, Washington DC ● Maize and wheat yields reduced by up to 40% at low latitudes ● Rice yields down 30% in China, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia ● By 2080 40% of the world’s population has less than 1000 litres of water per year that’s just 3 litres a day or a bath a month ● 20 - 30% plant and animal species at high risk of extinction ● Sustained global temperature increase of 2o: 20 – 40% decline in rainforest BAU: land with decreased crop suitability in 2100 Met Office 2009 Or…security implications of climate change Migration and refugees Rise in extremism in badly affected areas Public health Climate change International relations Public discontent/ disorder Failure of critical infrastructure Energy security Strategic products and technologies Communications and transport Uninsurable risks The impacts of climate change Source: IPCC ● Climate change: why are we worried? ● Global and national targets ● UK – energy use and climate change ● Energy security and climate change mitigation ● Conclusions Required global emissions reduction Why? • Advances in science • Actual emissions higher than forecast Assessment of damage Decision rule: • keep temperature change close to 2°C and probability of 4°C increase at very low levels Global trajectories considered • Early or later peak (2015 vs. 2030) • 3%/4% annual emissions reduction • • Required global emissions reduction of 50% 20-24 GtCO2e emissions in 2050 8-10 GtCO2e in 2100 Appropriate developed country/UK contribution 50% global reduction Burden share • Alternative methodologies (contract and converge, intensity convergence, triptych etc.) • Equal per capita emissions: ̶ 20-24 GtCO2e global total in 2050 ̶ implies 2.1-2.6 tCO2e per capita All GHGs 2.1-2.6 CO2e per capita gives a UK reduction of at least 80% by 2050 Aviation and shipping included So what does that mean? ● In 2050 total CO2e per head needs to be 2.1 – 2.6 tonnes per annum ● A return flight to Los Angeles for 1 person 2.5 tonnes ● An average new car today (160g/km), driven 15,000km per year, emits 2.4 tonnes per annum Global CO2 emissions Source: WRI (2006) Global CO2 emissions Energy emissions Source: WRI (2006) How do we deal with global issues? ● Copenhagen, December 2009 ● 120 Heads of State ● Agreement to keep below 2o ● No binding global agreement to reduce emissions ● But individual country targets ● ● now received from over 100 countries Potential to deliver 50% global reduction ● Climate change: why are we worried? ● Global and national targets ● UK – energy use and emissions ● Energy security and climate change mitigation ● Conclusions The scale of the UK CO2 challenge 679 Mt CO2e International aviation & international shipping* 42 UK non-CO2 GHGs 94 Other CO2 Industrial CO2 (heat & industrial processes) 109 Residential, public & commercial heat 97 Domestic transport 135 Electricity generation * bunker f uels basis 76% cut (= 80% vs. 1990) Energy emissions 159 Mt CO2e 178 2007 emissions Committee on Climate Change October 2009 2050 objective Meeting required reductions Reducing power sector emissions: Renewables (Wind, solar, tidal and marine, biomass), nuclear, CCS Application of power to transport and heat Reducing transport emissions: • Fuel efficiency • Electric/plug-in hybrids • Bio fuels (first vs. second generation) Reducing heat emissions: • Energy efficiency • Lifestyle change • Electric heat (e.g. heat pumps, storage heating) • Biomass boilers • CCS in industry Power sector decarbonisation Emissions intensity to 2050 Power generation to 2050 600 TWh electricity generation per year 600 g/CO2 per kWh 500 500 400 300 400 200 300 100 200 2000 0 2006 2010 2020 2030 2050 90% path 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 UK electricity installed capacity DECC 2009 UK electricity generation 1996 - 2008 DECC 2009 Capacity and generating mix 2008 & 2020 Generating capacity By 2020: Extra 23GW wind: 27GW total 3 new nuclear plants CCS demonstration plants Generating mix CCC 2009 UK emissions 2006 695 Mt CO2e International aviation & shipping* 42 UK non-CO2 GHGs 98 Other CO2 Oil Non-energy emissions Industry (heat & industrial processes) 108 Oil, Gas, Coal, Electricity, Renewables Residential & Commercial heat 103 Oil, Gas, Coal, Electricity, Renewables Domestic transport 134 184 Electricity Generation 2006 emissions * bunker fuels basis Oil, Renewables Gas, Coal, Nuclear, Renewables ● Climate change: why are we worried? ● Global and national targets ● UK – energy use and climate change ● Energy security and climate change mitigation ● Conclusions Energy security ● Physical security: avoiding involuntary interruptions to supply ● Price security: avoiding spikes and providing energy at reasonable prices to consumers ● Geopolitical security: ensuring the UK retains independence in foreign policy by avoiding dependence for energy on particular nations DECC EMO 2008 Primary energy supply in the UK Global energy supplies DECC Energy Indicators UK energy supply ● ● ● 2007 net importer – 20% of energy supply ● Crude oil: net imports of 7.5% of consumption ● Gas: 21% imported ● Coal: 72% imported 2025 increasing levels of imports: ● Crude oil: 61% imported ● Gas: 63% imported ● Coal: predictions less clear 2050 continuing upward trend in % imported Where will our energy come from? By 2030 world energy demand will be up by 45% Fossil fuels sourced from less stable areas of the world IEA World Energy Outlook 2008 Some key import routes and suppliers for the future ● ● ● Oil and Gas ● Strait of Hormuz ● Suez Canal ● …. Gas ● Russia ● Turkey Coal ● Russia Fossil fuel dependency → increasing energy insecurity Capacity and generating mix 2008 & 2020 Generating capacity By 2020: Extra 23GW wind: 27GW total 3 new nuclear plants CCS demonstration plants Generating mix CCC 2009 Meeting required reductions Reducing power sector emissions: Renewables (Wind, solar, tidal and marine, biomass), nuclear, CCS Application of power to transport and heat Reducing transport emissions: • Fuel efficiency • Electric/plug-in hybrids • Bio fuels (first vs. second generation) Reducing heat emissions: • Energy efficiency • Lifestyle change • Electric heat (e.g. heat pumps, storage heating) • Biomass boilers • CCS in industry More radical renewables and nuclear strategies are feasible High feasible scenario for operational wind: 39% of generation Severn barrage 8.6MW: 10% of generation ……….. CCC 2009 Existing low carbon electricity markets CCC 2009 ● Climate change: why are we worried? ● Global and national targets ● UK – energy use and climate change ● Energy security and climate change mitigation ● Conclusions Conclusions ● Fossil fuel dependency → increasing energy insecurity and increased global insecurity and instability ● Climate change mitigation → increasing energy security and global stability ● Security, energy security, climate change impacts and climate change mitigation are closely linked ● Joined-up thinking and planning are required to ensure we address them together UK path to an 80% or more reduction in 2050 Wind and nuclear Other renewable and CCS Energy efficiency improvement Renewable heat Electric heat Electric cars/plug in hybrids 2008 2020 2050 1-2% of GDP in 2050