1. What will this mean for the environment?5
Global CO2 emissions will
rise but more slowly
owing to increasing shares
of gas and renewables
and energy intensity
reducing worldwide,
as rising economic growth
is now accompanied by
flattening energy demand.
China EU
per capita
per capita
supply demand
Overall, China will still import and consume the
most energy using more per head than the EU,
What are the wider implications?4
but growth will slow and later be fastest in India.
Rising shale gas and tight oil
output help the US achieve energy
self-sufficiency.
How will energy be used?3
10
20
30
40
50 60
70
80
90
100
Transport will be
the slowest
growing sector and
use more natural
gas, biofuels and
electricity,
but will still be
dominated by oil.
Power generation will account
for more than half of growth.
Coal
- consumption slo
w
ing
non
fossil oil
coal
gas
27%
Oil-
slowest growing
fuel
non
fossil oil
coalgas
27%
Renew
ables - continue t
o
grow
non
fossil oil
coalgas
7%
GAS
Naturalga
s - fastest growing
fossilfuel
non
fossil oil
coalgas
26%
What is the outlook for individual fuels?2
OILOIL
b
will come almost entirely from
emerging economies.
95%By 2035 world
energy demand
will grow by
but growth
will slow and...
41%
In 2035 how much energy will the world need?
1
BP Energy Outlook 2035
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BP Energy Outlook 2035
Our 2014 look-ahead to
the future of energy