Current:Home > Contact-usU.S. Energy Outlook: Sunny on the Trade Front, Murkier for the Climate-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
U.S. Energy Outlook: Sunny on the Trade Front, Murkier for the Climate
View Date:2025-01-11 08:35:41
With abundant new technology, slowing demand for energy and an ample supply, the United States appears nearly ready to export as much energy as it imports.
In its Annual Energy Outlook published Thursday, the Department of Energy’s statistical office declared that in most of the scenarios it examined, the nation will soon become a net exporter of energy.
If that trade balance were the only measure of President Barack Obama’s energy legacy, then he might declare victory and go home. But the picture portrayed in the the Energy Information Administration’s 127-page report is more complex than that—and full of mixed messages, especially when it comes to climate change impacts.
The outlook is made murkier by the political uncertainties as Donald Trump moves into the Oval Office. Republicans in Congress are set to conduct a broad assault on energy and climate laws and regulations, as well as the Paris climate agreement.
The EIA’s reference case operates on the assumption that no policies will change. And that’s unlikely at this moment of upheaval.
“One of the things that EIA administrators have learned over the years is that it is bad enough to have to forecast oil prices or natural gas prices or anything else, but when you go in and say, ‘We think Congress is going to do this,’ that’s guaranteed to get your resignation accepted,” said Adam Sieminski, who is himself about to retire from the job, as he presented a two-hour briefing on the new outlook.
In general, it shows that whatever progress is being made in reducing climate impacts through carbon pollution—and there has been quite a bit—there is still a long way to go.
Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, in one of the cabinet “exit memos” released by the White House on Thursday, said that “progress in advanced clean energy technology, sharply dropping costs, and increased deployment” were all pointing toward meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement.
“Yet, our analysis indicates that these advancements will not be enough to avert the worst effects of climate change,” he said. This would require “deep decarbonization” across the economy, driven by doubling spending on green energy research and a price on carbon. Both are in jeopardy, judging by the agenda shaping up under Republican control.
In her exit memo, Gina McCarthy, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, wrote of a similar yearning to not just carry out the Clean Power Plan but to expand on it.
“As the world changes and evolves, we must be prepared to participate in future conversations about carbon markets and emissions trading programs,” she wrote. “Both represent a tremendous opportunity for economic growth.”
Nothing of the kind is projected by the EIA’s model-driven outlook. It doesn’t contemplate what the energy landscape would look like in a scenario bounded by the demands of the Paris Agreement, which seeks a zero-carbon-emissions world later in this century.
Fossil-Fueled Future?
ExxonMobil Corporation, too, has just released its own energy outlook for the next few decades. As in the past, it predicts that fossil fuels will continue to provide a big majority of growing energy demand, with the result that emissions peak in 2030 and decline, but not rapidly, after that. It sees non-hydro renewables (wind, solar and biofuels) providing only 4 percent of energy supply in 2040.
Exxon’s chairman and chief executive, Rex Tillerson, nominated by Trump to be secretary of state, would be in charge of any U.S. negotiations if the Paris treaty is to be strengthened. Trump opposes the treaty, but Exxon has recently called it a good start toward confronting climate change. But the numbers in its report don’t gibe with those reflected in the science underlying the Paris treaty.
The EIA outlook, to some extent, also focuses on supply and demand for energy with a blind eye toward the ambition of Paris, and only secondarily looks at the climate implications.
When it turns its attention to the climate crisis, its reference case and most other scenarios examined project that emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas that is warming the Earth’s atmosphere, will decline at least modestly in the decades ahead.
The reference case, however, assumes that President Obama’s Clean Power Plan remains in place. In reality, the plan has been frozen by a judicial stay during pending litigation, and is targeted by Trump and the Republican majority in Congress. Aimed at controlling emissions from coal-fired power plants, it is the centerpiece of Obama’s climate policy agenda.
Recognizing the legal and political uncertainties, the EIA also produced a “No Clean Power Plan” case, and predictably found that if the plan is taken out of the equation, greenhouse gas emissions will be significantly higher.
Even with the Clean Power Plan included in the reference case, though, the EIA projects that the decline in emissions will slow—when the demands of Paris require acceleration.
U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels have been dropping at an average annual rate of 1.4 percent a year since 2005. The EIA reference case projects them falling only 0.2 percent a year through 2040.
The report does acknowledge signs of transformation ahead in the energy economy.
In most of the EIA scenarios, U.S. consumption of petroleum products remains below the peak oil use of 2005 for the next quarter century. One reason is that the use of oil in transportation fuels is expected to decline in all the scenarios.
“Total transportation-related energy consumption peaks in 2018 in the reference case and then declines through 2034,” the report said in a striking tribute to the effectiveness of fuel efficiency standards and the steady penetration of hybrid and electric vehicles.
Exports of cheap and plentiful natural gas are what the report sees as pushing the U.S. toward net exports of energy.
Meanwhile, whatever fuel is used to produce electricity—fossil fuels or renewables—total demand for electricity is climbing slowly. That is another sign that efficiency, not just new supplies, is having powerful long-term effects.
Without knowing the fate of the Clean Power Plan, though, it’s a guessing game to figure out what fuels will prominently provide that electric power over the long haul. And as this year’s forecast stretches out until 2050, the technological unknowns are just as great as the regulatory ones.
One thing is clear: coal is on a downward path in every case except the one for No Clean Power Plan. Even in that scenario, it is flat, not on any kind of rebound.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- West Virginia governor-elect Morrisey to be sworn in mid-January
- The weight bias against women in the workforce is real — and it's only getting worse
- Financier buys Jeffrey Epstein's private islands, with plans to create a resort
- Rediscovered Reports From 19th-Century Environmental Volunteers Advance the Research of Today’s Citizen Scientists in New York
- Jack Del Rio leaving Wisconsin’s staff after arrest on charge of operating vehicle while intoxicated
- The Fed admits some of the blame for Silicon Valley Bank's failure in scathing report
- From the Middle East to East Baltimore, a Johns Hopkins Professor Works to Make the City More Climate-Resilient
- New Study Identifies Rapidly Emerging Threats to Oceans
- Target will be closed on Thanksgiving: Here’s when stores open on Black Friday
- In Nevada’s Senate Race, Energy Policy Is a Stark Divide Between Cortez Masto and Laxalt
Ranking
- Republican Scott Baugh concedes to Democrat Dave Min in critical California House race
- Your Mission: Enjoy These 61 Facts About Tom Cruise
- From the Middle East to East Baltimore, a Johns Hopkins Professor Works to Make the City More Climate-Resilient
- Taylor Swift Jokes About Apparent Stage Malfunction During The Eras Tour Concert
- 32 things we learned in NFL Week 10: Who will challenge for NFC throne?
- Inside Malia Obama's Super-Private World After Growing Up in the White House
- An EPA proposal to (almost) eliminate climate pollution from power plants
- Beauty TikToker Mikayla Nogueira Marries Cody Hawken
Recommendation
-
Dramatic video shows Phoenix police rescue, pull man from car submerged in pool: Watch
-
From mini rooms to streaming, things have changed since the last big writers strike
-
Fifty Years After the UN’s Stockholm Environment Conference, Leaders Struggle to Realize its Vision of ‘a Healthy Planet’
-
Adidas finally has a plan for its stockpile of Yeezy shoes
-
A growing and aging population is forcing Texas counties to seek state EMS funding
-
The Decline of Kentucky’s Coal Industry Has Produced Hundreds of Safety and Environmental Violations at Strip Mines
-
Congress could do more to fight inflation
-
In ‘Silent Spring,’ Rachel Carson Described a Fictional, Bucolic Hamlet, Much Like Her Hometown. Now, There’s a Plastics Plant Under Construction 30 Miles Away