In the years ahead, 2019 could go down in the history books as a pivotal year in the energy transition.
This year may be a “tipping point when global capital markets accepted the technology-driven inevitability and grid parity cross-over from polluting thermal coal and the increased uptake of sustainable clean renewable energy,” Tim Buckley, Director Energy Finance Studies at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, wrote in a report.
However, his relentlessly negative attack on U.S. Shale is strongly contradicted by basic, elementary facts, and by professional analysts. Cunningham writes:
It was the year in which the hype around U.S. shale finally burst.
Based on what? U.S. Government, EIA, and OPEC (OPEC!) analysts all predict continued growth in U.S. oil output for the foreseeable future. If Nick Cunningham does not want to believe any of these organizations, perhaps he should read his fellow OilPrice writer, Jude Clemente, who recently wrote:
And even longer-term, the also just released International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook 2019 reports that the U.S. will account for 85% of global oil production growth through 2030.
I posted to an earlier article and my comment was deleted despite not violating any rules.
Still, global energy will continue to be governed by four principles well into the future.
The first principle is that there will be no post-oil era throughout the 21st century and far beyond. The second principle is that that there will be no peak oil demand either.
The third principle is that an imminent energy transition from hydrocarbon to renewables is an illusion. And the fourth principle is that oil and gas will remain the core business of the global oil industry well into the future.
Therefore, nobody should be deluded by Goldman Sachs’ move not to bankroll future oil and gas projects. It is no more than a trendy attempt to burnish its environmental credentials. The world will not be short of funds to invest in oil and gas. Governments could lend to governments and oil companies could equally do the same.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London
I'd like to ask if you believe our climate is changing as a result of rapidly dumping byproducts of combustion into the air and water? (We do this because it appears to us that there is no cost for doing so.) Are you really feeling good about dependency on burning stuff up to get the energy we need?
Does it bother you that people fight over fossil fuel as much as we do? What is the full-cost of burning fossil fuel, if we include world conflict and oil-industry pollution in the equation?
We have had an incredible ride on the back of fossil fuel, to date.. Do you really think that we can have business as usual, from here?
I appreciate Nick Cunningham's voice because it includes more of the full picture on producing and using fossil fuel, as compared to alternatives. I'm not advocating taking unrealistic stances, but I am in appreciation of saying what needs improving along with lauding the benefit of burning up a remarkable resource. Fossil fuels have been incredible for an incredibly short blip in Earth history.
I'd like to express my appreciation to Oil Price for taking a broad, comprehensive approach in reporting on energy. Best of luck to us all in the New Year!