Daniel Yergin: “COP 26” Meeting is Biden’s Next Move on The New Map of Geopolitics and Energy
IHS Markit anticipates significant changes in energy and geopolitics due to global energy transition and net-zero carbon goals, highlighted by the upcoming COP26 conference in Glasgow. Daniel Yergin notes that U.S. emissions must decrease by 50% by 2030, aligning with President Biden's climate ambitions. The report examines the need for practical actions while grappling with global tensions, highlighting substantial CO2 emissions under net-zero commitments. Furthermore, the evolving dynamics of the energy market, especially regarding oil demand and renewable energy, will present both challenges and opportunities for investment.
- Global commitment to net-zero carbon goals could lead to substantial investment opportunities.
- Technological advancements in energy, such as carbon capture and hydrogen, are becoming competitive on a global scale.
- The U.S. achieved energy independence on a net basis for the first time in 72 years at the end of 2020.
- The Biden administration's tension between climate initiatives and traditional energy reliance may complicate the transition.
- The push for electric vehicles will drastically increase demand for critical minerals, creating potential supply chain issues.
The upcoming
When world leaders, including
“Geophysical maps change very slowly. But political, technical and economic maps can change quickly, revealing new topographies that present multiple challenges and need to be traversed with care and thought,” Yergin writes in the new epilogue. “We are on such terrain today.”
In The New Map, Yergin, author of The Quest and The Prize (for which he received the Pulitzer Prize) surveys an energy world being reshaped by myriad forces—from the remarkable change in the energy position of
The book chronicles the rise of energy transition as a potent global issue and, in the new epilogue, one of President Biden’s most ambitious goals—reducing
Yergin points to the inherent tensions in the Biden administration. It is seeking to make “climate” a major criterion in every policy—from infrastructure to financial regulation—and pressuring the oil and gas industry in a way that could lead to increased oil imports. Yet Biden himself, in contrast to his major Democratic rivals, pledged not to “ban fracking” and, when he was a
By the spring of 2021, more than
“The very fact that so many nations have voluntarily embraced something so fundamental and so challenging as carbon neutrality is remarkable. What makes it even more remarkable is that much of this was done during COVID-19 time, when lockdowns became ubiquitous and economic activity, suppressed,” writes Yergin.
“Alignment with Paris”—the 2015 Paris climate agreement—has become a clarion call outside of government as well, Yergin observes. Financial firms, representing many tens of trillions of dollars of assets, have added “climate risk” to the criteria by which they make investment and lending decisions. More than 30 central banks have elevated “climate” into their mandates. “Climate disclosure”—aiming to demonstrate how company strategies align with the
Now the world is moving from the “after Paris” era to a new and challenging “post-Glasgow” phase, posing tough questions that will be on the global agenda for years, Yergin says.
“By now the ‘What’ has become clear in terms of energy transition—net zero carbon,” he writes. “But what remains uncertain is the ‘How.’ How to get all the way to carbon neutrality in a global economy that currently relies on fossil fuels for 80 percent of its energy.”
In many ways the acceleration of energy transition overshadowed several remarkable events across the energy spectrum during a tumultuous year, Yergin writes. Among them:
- The unprecedented collapse of oil demand from COVID (which briefly sent prices into negative territory) abated and oil demand recovered, lifting prices to a level that would permit new investment in oil and gas projects.
-
At the end of 2020—for the first time in 72 years—the
United States on a net basis was energy independent, an event as significant as it was largely overlooked.
- New technological developments, including carbon capture and storage, have made “green” or “clean” energy solutions competitive on an international scale. And hydrogen has moved from being an “also ran” to a major potential energy source by 2050.
-
The
U.S. shale industry—particularly hard hit by the COVID collapse in oil prices—stabilized andthe United States remains the world’s number one producer of oil and natural gas.
-
Unprecedented stress in global supply chains is pushing up costs and helping to push up inflation—the cost of shipping one container from
China tothe United States has increased from to as high as$1,500 .$30,000
-
With the move to electric cars, demand for critical minerals will skyrocket (lithium up
4300% , cobalt and nickel up2500% ), with an electric vehicle using 6 times more minerals than a conventional car and a wind turbine using 9 times more minerals than a gas-fueled power plant.
- The new global supply chains for “net zero carbon”, beginning with mining, will also come under scrutiny for their carbon and ESG footprints, as “Big Oil” gives way to “Big Shovels”.
-
The resources needed for the “mineral-intensive energy system” of the future are also highly concentrated in relatively few countries. Whereas the top 3 oil producers in the world are responsible for about 30 percent of total liquids production, the top 3 lithium producers control more than
80% of supply.China controls60% of rare earths output needed for wind towers; theDemocratic Republic of the Congo ,70% of the cobalt required for EV batteries.
The situation is rendered more complex by a new era of great power competition and strategic rivalry—particularly between
“Here is where the geopolitical and energy maps overlap,” he writes. “The great power rivalry will create challenges for the world economy, including intensified competition for resources and additional pressures on what will become the increasingly stressed supply chains for net zero carbon.”
A new global “North/South” divide is also emerging, creating new tensions between developed and developing countries, he writes. “Energy transition certainly means something very different to a developing country such as
All this adds up to a new era in the relationship between energy and nations—one marked by the emergence of climate change as one of the defining features of the New Map.
“The drive for net zero carbon in a matter of just a few decades will mean remaking the global economy—and doing so in a remarkably short time. It will require huge investment, bring dislocations, add to financial burdens on governments and impose heavy costs on some parts of the economy,” Yergin writes. “At the same time, it will create major new economic opportunities, open new frontiers for technology and innovation and stimulate entrepreneurship and creativity. While it will present new avenues for cooperation, it will also create risks for conflict.”
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Praise for The New Map:
“Mandatory reading for President-elect Joe Biden’s incoming team.” — Admiral
“A master class on how the world works.” —
“Supremely readable—no mean feat among geostrategy tomes.” —
“At a time when solid facts and reasoned arguments are in retreat,
“A tour de force of geopolitical understanding.” –
As
“Brisk and authoritative, an impressive combination.” — The Economist
“Admirable, well-researched, highly readable examination of all the changes that have turned the rock-solid certainties of the past into today’s dangerous combustibility.” —
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