1 / 25

Bryn Davidson DRAFT June 12, 2006

Our Future(s) 4 Scenarios for the coming energy transition. Bryn Davidson DRAFT June 12, 2006. Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas. International Energy Agency.

tindal
Download Presentation

Bryn Davidson DRAFT June 12, 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Our Future(s) 4 Scenarios for the coming energy transition. Bryn DavidsonDRAFT June 12, 2006

  2. Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas International Energy Agency 'Pessimists' vs. 'Optimists': Two divergent views of the future. Q: How to create an inclusive dialogue in the face of these mixed messages? A: Futures Thinking captions - J.J.C Bruggink in Four European Energy Futures

  3. Technology and Markets Belief: Technology and markets won’t compensate for the depletion of conventional fossil fuels. Belief: Technology and markets will compensate for the depletion of conventional fossil fuels.

  4. The Globalized Economy Belief: The globalized economy will have to contract. It will be supplanted by local and regional economies. Belief: The globalized economy will continue to grow and will be the mainstay into the next century.

  5. Climate Change Belief: As we run out of cheap oil and gas - and start to get desperate - then we’ll probably burn anything: coal, forests, crops.... Belief: Climate Change... hmmm... well we’re concerned... but we don’t want to damage the economy.

  6. Oil & Gas peak early & deplete rapidly Oil & Gas peak later and deplete slowly Peak Oil and Climate Change are unprecedentedglobal challenges: defined by uncertainty whilerequiring decades of dedicated effort to address. We can be reactive(leaving our choices to the market). ..or proactive(making investments today that will pay back in either version of the future)

  7. Proactive ResponseGovernment, Society, Technology & Markets 4 Energy Scenarios 3 1 RapidDepletionand/or early peaking SlowDepletionand/or later peaking 4 2 Reactive ResponseMarkets, Technology, Society & Government

  8. Proactive ResponseGovernment, Society, Technology & Markets 4 Energy Scenarios “Lean Economy” * “Techno-Markets” aka “Powerdown” aka “Sustainable Development” RapidDepletionand/or early peaking SlowDepletionand/or later peaking “Collapse” “Burnout” aka “Mad Max”aka “Easter Island”aka “90s Cuba/Russia” aka “Climate Chaos”aka “Business as Usual” Reactive ResponseMarkets, Technology, Society & Government * per David Fleming

  9. Proactive ResponseGovernment, Society, Markets & Technology Example Scenario:Conventional oil peaks before 2010 but the depletion rate is buffered by non-conventional sources and rising prices. Governments reform tax laws around energy and the environment. Carbon sequestration allows for the clean use of fossil fuels. The 'Green' sector shows tremendous growth, while older industries decay. Developing third-world economies 'leap-frog' to sustainable economies. “Techno-Markets” aka “Sustainable Development” SlowDepletionand/or later peaking

  10. “Techno-Markets” aka “Sustainable Development”

  11. Example Scenario:Non-conventional fossil fuels offset depletion masking any overall 'peak'. The price of oil hovers above $70/bbl for several decades and drives a transition to coal, nuclear, and unsustainably sourced biomass. CO2 emissions skyrocket, while habitats , farmland, and forests are decimated in a rush for wood and biomass. Super storms, rising sea levels, and desertification cause massive refugee and health crises. SlowDepletionand/or later peaking “Burnout” aka “Climate Chaos”aka “Business as Usual” Reactive ResponseTechnology, Markets, Government & Society

  12. “Burnout” aka “Climate Chaos”aka “Business as Usual”

  13. Proactive ResponseGovernment, Society, Markets & Technology Example Scenario:Conventional oil/gas peaks around 2010 and depletes surprisingly fast. Governments enact their rapid-conservation plans drafted in ‘06. Political and religious groups come together to support international cooperation and help to avert armed conflict and the widespread use of dirty fuels. The global economy transitions (with the help of a few price and supply shocks) from a global-centric to a regional and local-centric model. “Lean Economy” * aka “Powerdown” RapidDepletionand/or early peaking * per David Fleming

  14. “Lean Economy” aka “Powerdown”

  15. Example Scenario:Conventional oil peaks before 2010 and depletes rapidly; faster than substitutes and new sources from tar sands, coal and oil shale can be scaled up. Declining global fuel supplies lead to negative growth. Investors lose faith in stock markets and currencies collapse. High prices and shortages cause 'demand destruction' but the base level of demand is too inelastic to contract voluntarily at the rate of depletion. Natural gas peaks and declines rapidly in many regions (including North America) as LNG growth fails to offset depletion. Nations battle for resources abroad and fight unrest at home. Unemployment soars, global travel and the globalized economy collapse. Health and food crises are rampant. Populations contract from lower birth rates and lower life expectancies. Governments revert to city-states while the former suburbs become lawless salvage yards. RapidDepletionand/or early peaking “Collapse” aka “Mad Max”aka “Easter Island”aka “90s Cuba/Russia” Reactive ResponseTechnology, Markets, Government & Society

  16. “Collapse” aka “Mad Max”aka “Easter Island”aka “90s Cuba/Russia”

  17. A Few Thoughts on Transition Dynamics Markets are fantastic tools for bringing about new technologies and innovations – but they are a poor mechanism for long term planning or the preservation of social justice. The global economy will bring ‘substitutes’ for oil and gas to the market, but a few questions remain: Question 1: “Will we be willing to to pay more, or potentially do less, to bring on clean substitutes?” Question 2: “Can substitutes scale up quickly enough – relative to the depletion of conventional resources?”

  18. A Few (more) Thoughts on Transition Dynamics Changing what we do is hard and takes a long time... ...unless there is a ‘crisis’. In a crisis, people can come together in remarkable ways... ...or fight to the death to preserve the life they’ve come to expect. The transition away from cheap oil and gas will likely be punctuated by a number of economic and environmental crises......crises that will bring about step-changes in what we expect. Our expectations and decisions are never purely rational... ...they are also emotional and cultural (i.e. we will lean towards what is exciting and/or familiar)

  19. (even more) Thoughts on Transition Dynamics The more proactive we are – the more likely we are to create a preferred future. On the path toward creating our preferred future we will have to make hard decisions– like voluntarily paying more for clean energy vs. dirty energy To have a broad impact, these decisions should unfold from a broad consensus – and that broad consensus needs to unfold from an inclusive dialogue. An inclusive dialogue needs to be big enough to encompass many world-views – and different views of the future.

  20. Our Future(s) 4 Scenarios for the coming energy transition. These scenarios are a work-in-progress. Thanks, in advance, for your feedback... Bryn Davidson604.728.0606bryn@dynamiccities.org www.dynamiccities.orgwww.rao-d.com

More Related