Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable Energy, R. J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC, Iraq 2011
1. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
Global Energy Trends
Role of Renewable Energy
R. J. Morris
AndMore Associates, LLC
Renewable Energy Conference:
Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
Baghdad, Iraq
May 2‐4, 2011
For complete presentation please contact at the address provided on page 12
AndMore Associates, LLC
World Energy Consumption
1990 ‐2035
quadrillion Btu
800
739
History Projections 686
639
600 59
543 0
495
406
400 374
355
200
0
1990 1995 2000 2007 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035
Source: International Energy Outlook 2010, U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.
2. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
World Energy Consumption
OECD and Non‐OECD, 1990‐2035
Rise of Non-OECD
Energy Use
quadrillion btu
History Projections
OECD
Non‐OECD
Source: International Energy Outlook 2010, U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
AndMore Associates, LLC
World Energy Use by Fuel Type
1990‐2035
History Projections
Coal
Liquids Natural Gas
Renewables
Nuclear
Source: International Energy Outlook 2010, U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.
3. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
Cumulative Energy Supply Investment
Requirement till 2030
Power 52% Oil 24% Gas 21% Coal 3% Biofuels <
$6.3 trillion $5.5 trillion $0.7 1%
$13.6 trillion
trillion $0.2
Transmission & Exploration & Exploration & trillion
Distribution 50% Development : 80% Development: Mining :
61% 91%
Generation 50% Refining : 16%
Transmission & Shipping &
Shipping : 4% Distribution: 31% Ports: 9%
LNG Chain: 8%
Investment of $26 trillion / $1 trillion per year is needed
Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2010
AndMore Associates, LLC
Renewable Role in Present
Global Energy Consumption
2008
Source: REN21 Renewables Global Status Report 2010
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.
4. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
Leaders in Installed Renewable Capacity
Total Renewables
2009
1. China
2. U.S.
3. Brazil
4. Canada
5. Japan
Source: U.S. Department of Energy, REN21
AndMore Associates, LLC
Rising Global Support for RE
23%
18%
Government support for RE is a key driver, projected to rise from $57 billion in 2009 to
$205 billion in 2035. Higher Fossil fuel prices and declining investment costs also play a
role
Source: International Energy Agency , World Energy Outlook 2010
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.
5. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
G‐20 Investment in Clean Energy
Source: Pew Center on Global Climate Change
AndMore Associates, LLC
MENA RE Potential
Renewables can supply 18% of electricity in MENA region by
2035, up from 3% now
Source: International Energy Agency , World Energy Outlook 2010
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.
6. Global Energy Trends: Role of Renewable 2011 Renewable Energy Conference:
Energy Summary Presentation Supporting Sustainable Development for Iraq
R.J. Morris, AndMore Associates, LLC May 2011
Spurring RE growth in MENA region
• MENA’s share of renewable energy just 3% of total
electricity generation ( International Energy Agency,
World Energy Outlook 2010)
• ~ 28 million people in the region still lack access to
electricity, especially in rural areas, and about 8 million
people rely on traditional biomass for all their energy
needs ( The World Bank)
• Despite relatively low total greenhouse gas emission as
compared to other regions, MENA has the world’s third
largest growth of carbon emissions compounding the risk
of climate change
Tremendous RE potential in MENA remains to be tapped
AndMore Associates, LLC
R. J. Morris
AndMore Associates, LLC
http://www.linkedin.com/in/rjmorrisdc/
www.andmoreassociates.com
THANK YOU!
AndMore Associates, LLC
www.andmoreassociates.com
All material in this presentation is, unless otherwise stated, the property of the authors. Reproduction or retransmission of the materials, in whole or in
part, in any manner is not permitted without the prior written consent of the copyright holder.