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Press Release 19 September 2007

Contact: Theresa Hedberg, t: +44 20 7734 5996

World Energy Council launches recent edition of the
Survey of Energy Resources

For the 21st time in a row the World Energy Council (WEC) is launching its unique and comprehensive compilation of global energy resources, the 2007 Survey of Energy resources.

Complementing the BP Statistical Review and the IEA, World Energy Outlook, it details 16 key energy resources with the latest data provided by 94 WEC Member Committees worldwide. No entity other than WEC gathers such wide-ranging data covering finite resources, such as coal and gas, as well as the main intermediate and perpetual sources of energy, including geothermal, hydro and wind energy.

This 2007 edition has been updated during the last three years and provides recent developments on the availability of energy resources - one of the most significant drivers of our economy.
On the different energy resources the following changes are significant compared to the previous Survey:

Coal:

 

  • Plentiful - Economically recoverable in 70 countries
  • Global total lower by 7% in 3 years (refined assessments)
  • Demand expected to continue to grow
  • Strongest growth in developing countries
  • Coal-to-liquids for transportation provides additional demand

Oil:

  • Proved recoverable reserves are 117 billion barrels higher than 2002
  • 61% in Middle East, 11% in Africa, 8% in each of Europe and S. America and 5% in N. America
  • Oil will not run out for many years
  • Predictions of the production peak highly dependent on resource estimate revisions, further discoveries, technology advances, unconventional sources
  • Timing is less important than vision of the long-term decline

Natural Gas:

 

  • Proved reserves grew by 3.5% 2005/2002
  • Approximately half in OPEC (compare oil with 75%)
  • 20% in one field between Qatar and Iran
  • Present production levels equal 56 year supply from just proved reserves – resources will add more
  • Amount to be discovered has been consistently underestimated

Uranium:

 

  • Reasonably assured resources grew by 4% 2005/2003
  • 10-fold price increase since 2000
  • Largest production in Canada, Australia, Kazakhstan, Russia
  • 435 reactors with 367 GWe capacity at beginning 2007
  • Thorium 3 times as abundant but no active exploration or exploitation

Renewable Energy:

 

  • Renewables provide about 1/5th of power generation
  • Hydro about 87% of renewables; only 1/3rd of potential developed
  • Bioenergy – largest share is wood, followed by charcoal and biomass for electricity. Also crop residues, municipal waste etc.
  • Biofuels interest at an all-time high; price of oil exceeds  biofuels such as ethanol (40% of world production in US and 37% in Brazil)
  • Wind has grown rapidly, capacity doubling every 3.5 years
  • Solar thermal, PV and Passive Solar have great potential: PV markets growing by 35%/year
  • Marine energies yet to be developed fully – wave resource alone estimated to be as much as 10TW


The study was presented today to a round table of leading media energy experts organised by the World Energy Council in London and endorsed by Fulvio Conti, CEO and General Manager of Enel, Italy.

Gerald Doucet, the Secretary General of the World Energy Council said:

"Energy demand will grow significantly over the coming years and is foreseen to double by 2050. This recent update on available energy resources proves that there is sufficient amount in place to meet the demand if all energy options are kept open."

The study is available to browse online or download.

WEC Media contact:
Mathias Hocke: hocke@worldenergy.org
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7734 5996
Stephan Albrechtskirchinger: albrechtskirchinger@worldenergy.org
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7734 5996

Policies for the future: 2011 Assessment of country energy and climate policy

The World Energy Council in partnership with Oliver Wyman (global consulting firm) has over the past year worked on its third Assessment of country energy and climate policy aiming to identify key areas for policy improvements and to understand how successful policies can be transferred from one country to another. more > 

Assessment 2011 Cover