Crude demand may peak in 5 years

epa05113060 ( FILE) A file picture dated 03 July 2015 showing the old Royal Dutch Shell company logo at a service station in Beauty Point, Tasmania, Australia. Royal Dutch Shell plc on 20 January 2016 reported a sharp fall in profits for the last quarter of 2015 as low oil prices hit earnings and the company restructured to reduce costs. Shell said it expected fourth-quarter earnings to be between 1.6 billion and 1.9 billion dollars, down from 4.2 billion dollars in the fourth quarter of 2014. Full-year earnings, including the impact of lower prices on the company's oil inventory, are expected to total 10.4 billion to 10.7 billion dollars, about 45 per cent lower than the 19 billion dollars reported in 2014.  EPA/UDO WEITZ

 

Bloomberg

Royal Dutch Shell Plc, the world’s second-biggest oil company by market value, thinks demand for oil could peak in as little as five years.
“Oil, we’ve long been of the opinion that demand will peak before supply,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry said on a conference call on Tuesday. “And that peak may be somewhere between 5 and 15 years hence, and it will be driven by efficiency and substitution, more than offsetting the new demand for transport.”
The World Energy Council has forecast that petroleum consumption will peak in 2030 if renewable energy and other disruptive technologies continue to improve rapidly. Michael Liebreich, founder of Bloomberg New Energy Finance, predicts the growth of electric vehicles and better fuel efficiency mean oil demand will peak around 2025 and decline in the 2030s.
Shell will still be in business for “many decades to come” because it is focusing more on natural gas and
expanding its new-energy businesses including biofuels and hydrogen, Henry said.
“Even if oil demand declines, its replacements will be in products that we are very well placed to supply one way or the other, so we need to be the energy major of the 2050s,” Henry said. “That underpins our strategic thinking. It’s part of the switch to gas, it’s part of what we do in biofuels, both now and in the future.” Shell sees “oil and gas as being part of the energy mix for many decades to come,” it said in a statement Wednesday.
Shell bought BG Group Plc for $54 billion this year in a move the company said was partly aimed at increasing its gas business. Gas made up about 48 percent of the company’s total production in the third quarter ended Sept. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. UK competitor BP Plc
had 38 percent gas, including from units, in the period.
The anticipated increase in demand of about 20 million barrels a day over the next two decades will probably be big enough to overwhelm the impact of the electric car, Spencer Dale, chief economist for BP, said Oct. 11. Those vehicles will have a bigger impact in 30 to 50 years, although there’s a chance it could happen sooner, he said.

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