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An Energy and Environment Strategy for Albertas Future

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We have the raw material' to build a sustainable, prosperous and clean' future ... growth slowing; accelerating retirements create major transition issues ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Energy and Environment Strategy for Albertas Future


1
An Energy and Environment Strategy for Albertas
Future
IRIS Seminar Series Presentation October 18,
2006 Dr. R. Mansell
2
Key Points
  • Albertas economic future will be largely
    determined by the its energy sector
  • We need to worry about the Curse of Natural
    Resources
  • Continued growth and prosperity is not a given
    even in a world of high energy prices
  • We have the raw material to build a
    sustainable, prosperous and clean future but
    the challenges are huge and increasing
  • We need to substantially increase our investments
    in and commitments to intensive (value added) vs
    extensive growth advanced technologies and
    policies related to in situ oil sands, enhanced
    oil recovery and unconventional gas
    polygeneration, integrated and integrating energy
    and environmental technologies, policies and
    market systems for conventional, unconventional,
    alternative and renewable energy and energy
    efficiency, conservation and adaptation.

3
Outline
  • Historical Perspective
  • Curse of Natural Resources
  • Albertas Energy and Economic Future
  • Issues, implications, strategies

4
1. Historical Perspective
  • Objective to put our current and future growth
    and development in perspective.

5
Long term gain in relative size of the Alberta
economy
6
Large variations but long term average population
and employment growth rates for Alberta are
approximately 0.8 and 1.0 percentage points above
the national average
7
High variability but long term average real GDP
growth rate for Alberta is about 1.0 percentage
point above the national average. Declining
variability?
8
Net Migration accounts for approx half of
population increase on average sensitive to
relative regional income and employment conditions
9
Economic performance closely tied to real energy
prices
10
Impacts of the oil and gas sector 1971-2004
Source R. Mansell and R. Schlenker. An Overview
of the Impacts of the Oil and Gas Sector on the
Alberta Economy (forthcoming).
11
Importance of the energy sector
  • The energy sector directly and indirectly
    accounts for approximately half of total Alberta
    output, income, employment government revenues.

12
Contributions to other regions
Source R. Mansell, R. Schlenker and J. Anderson.
ISEEE Backgrounder, November 2005.
13
Growing impact of the energy sector- provincially
and nationally
14
2. The curse of natural resources
  • Every boom contains the seeds for a bust
  • Is the Alberta economy in a boom?
  • What can we learn from the boom in the 1970s and
    early 1980s?
  • Is there a curse of natural resources?

15
The boom of the 1970s and early 1980s
  • Real energy prices at historical highs
  • Investment close to 40 of GDP vs average of
    around 25 normally rapid increase in imports as
    a of GDP
  • Real GDP growth rates more than double the
    national average
  • Unemployment rate consistently at around 4
  • Increasing inflation rate, particularly for
    assets (eg housing) not tradable across regions
  • High net in-migration rates
  • High debt equity ratios
  • Extrapolative expectations increase in
    speculation and asset trading vs asset
    development
  • Infrastructure shortfalls all previous fiscal
    difficulties began in a period of rapid growth

16
The Curse of Natural Resources
  • Dissipation / destruction of energy rents through
    inefficient exploitation, policy and regulation
  • Impacts on other sectors (de-diversification)
    during periods of rapid growth
  • Rent dependency (focus on consuming the rents
    complacency lack of investment in extending
    production and value of the resources, including
    other natural capital)
  • Instability

17
3. Albertas energy and economic future
  • The resource potential and alignment of the
    stars
  • The changing structure of the energy sector
  • The key challenges

18
The Big Picture
l
Global energy demand will continue to growbut
declining conventional oil and gas reserves and
ever-increasing environmental constraints from
water restrictions, to resource access, to
greenhouse gas limits-- present huge challenges
for us and the world.
Night view of earth from National Renewable
Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colorado. Chart from
US DOE
19
Global Energy Trends
  • The global demand for energy will continue to
    grow
  • The demand for oil and gas will remain strong,
    and given the supply situation, real prices will,
    on average, be substantially above historical
    averages
  • Price volatility will increase
  • Natural gas will become a more important
    constraint than oil in both oil and gas supply,
    unconventional supplies will be key
  • There will be substantial growth in the use of
    coal
  • Growth in alternative and renewable energy will
    be strong but will remain a relatively small
    share of total energy the sorting process will
    take a decade or more before the sustainable
    alternatives are clear
  • It will be a challenge just to replace the
    nuclear generation capacity that is coming to the
    end of its useful life

20
One of the Worlds Largest Concentrations of
Energy Resources potential source of sustained
comparative advantage
  • Almost 50 billion bbls
  • of conventional oil, 150 trillion
  • cubic feet (tcf) of conventional
  • gas and perhaps as much as
  • 1,000 tcf of unconventional gas
  • remain potentially recoverable.
  • Over 170 billion bbls potentially
  • recoverable from the oil sands
  • and ultimate potential of over
  • 600 billion tonnes of coal.
  • -Large potential for
  • alternate and renewable energy.

We have the potential to become a globally
competitive, clean and secure energy super power.
21
Converting Potential into Reality
  • There are huge challenges to economically and
    responsibly converting even a modest portion of
    this enormous potential into a sustained, high
    standard of living for current and future
    generations it is definitely not a slam dunk.
  • We must invest strategically and wisely we must
    maintain those commitments over the longer term
    and we also need some good luck.

22
Increasing costs and declining conventional gas
production has large implications for economic
growth, govt revenues, upgrading of resources
etc.
23
General decline in ratio of resource revenues to
total value
24
Real Prices Under 2004 and 2005 EUB Forecasts
25
Will the future look after itself? Declining
production values for conventional oil and gas
dampen prospects.
26
Will unconventional gas reverse the trend?
27
Implications for government resource revenues
(note figures for 2007-13 based on expected long
term averages and dont take account of short
term fluctuations in prices)
28
Production Values Under 2005 Forecasts
29
Leveling of Energy Sector Induced Growth?
30
Projected Impacts of the Energy Sector
31
4. Issues, Implications and Strategies
  • Can we significantly determine Albertas energy,
    environment and economic future?
  • What are the key challenges?
  • Are we asking the right questions?
  • What are the appropriate strategies?

32
Defining Our Energy Future
  • How much of Albertas energy-based economic
    progress can be attributed to research and
    development, entrepreneurship and smart policy
    and regulation?
  • An example Asleep at the Switch Oil Shale vs
    Oil Sands
  • Most of the technology that has allowed rapid
    growth of the oil sands industry today was
    developed over more than five decades of research
    effort. Breakthroughs such as SAGD were
    developed over the 1980s and 1990s under the
    AOSTRA program- a joint government and industry
    research initiative. Without such programs, the
    equivalent oil shales industry in the US has not
    developed.

33
The Investment Payoff
  • The Investment approximately 2 billion in RD
    invested over 20 years
  • The Payoff

34
Challenges
  • Increasing density / intensity of development and
    increasing sensitivities to development greater
    distance between supply and markets
  • Resource access and related infrastructure
    development challenges, including the huge costs
    of physical and social infrastructure to support
    growth increasing average age of energy
    infrastructure
  • Demographic aging and impacts on supply and
    structure of labour supply increasing difficulty
    in maintaining high net in migration levels
  • Climate change and availability of cheap water
    changes in the cost / value ratio of energy and
    environmental resources
  • Growing need for integrated solutions and
    sustained, major investments in development and
    implementation of new technologies
  • Policy and regulation associated with all of the
    above

35
Particular issues
  • Labour
  • The market will solve it but do we like that
    solution?
  • Difficult to sustain net migration above current
    levels
  • Drop in labour force participation rate is
    probably a signal
  • Productivity growth slowing accelerating
    retirements create major transition issues
  • Key issues are sectoral and temporal
    dislocations wages and prices are upwardly
    flexible but downwardly sticky

36
Particular Issues contd
  • Resource Access
  • Social and physical infrastructure constraints
    will remain new investments to make up for
    runnng down of assets and significant growth
    over the last two decades are huge annual govt
    investments averaging less than 10 of business
    investments question of how to finance without
    incurring public debt
  • Increasing complexity in dealing with land owners
    and integrated resource management issues energy
    development shifting increasingly to relatively
    undeveloped northern areas
  • Affected groups are typically unaware of how the
    benefits of resource development flow to them

37
Particular Issues contd
  • Environmental
  • Lack of clear policy direction, particularly with
    respect to value and allocation of water and
    emissions, especially GHGs
  • Growing domestic (and foreign) sensitivity to
    real and perceived environmental issues
  • Lack of market based systems to coordinate and
    drive efficient integrated energy and environment
    solutions

38
Particular Issues contd
  • New Technologies
  • Need breakthroughs (like SAGD) in a number of
    areas for greater sustainability but these will
    take greater commitment and time, while
    investments now will lock in current and
    incremental technologies

39
Symtoms vs Fundamental Issues?
  • Are we asking the right questions?
  • What is the long term vision for the province?
  • Are we trying to maximize growth and extensive
    development or sustainable / long term prosperity
    (more intensive development)?
  • What is the role of government in managing growth?

40
Some thoughts on strategies and Albertas future
  • Observations
  • Long term averages for real energy prices will be
    substantially higher in the future
    transportation fuels will become an increasing
    supply issue there will be considerable
    volatility and some major surprises
  • There will be no major breakthroughs that will
    significantly affect the expected dominant role
    of fossil fuels in meeting growing energy demands
  • The provincial government (and to an extent other
    governments) will remain addicted to revenues
    generated directly or indirectly by the energy
    sector
  • There will be increasingly constraining
    environmental policies affecting the energy
    sector CO2 emissions are the Achilles heel.

41
Observations continued
  • The energy sector has been a major determinant of
    Albertas economic progress and it will be a
    major determinant of the provinces economic
    future
  • The challenges are huge but so are the
    opportunities
  • We are at a crossroads complacency will almost
    certainly mean dampened economic prospects while
    strategic commitments, leadership, investments
    and policy can assure a bright long term future
  • We need a vision of the future we want and the
    tradeoffs we are prepared to make
  • The role of governing and managing growth in this
    environment will be much more challenging than in
    the past
  • Ultimately the huge energy potential and the
    dependence of the province on the government
    revenues, investment and value added associated
    with the energy sector will keep the provinces
    focus on the energy sector

42
Observations continued
  • It will take some time for the fundamental
    changes to this sector to be reflected in
    attitudes and expectations (example the decline
    in non-renewable resource revenue as a percentage
    of energy revenues as basin matures and shift is
    to unconventional oil and gas)
  • The tensions around the distribution of income
    and wealth generated by the energy sector will
    grow

43
Observations and Strategies
  • To be successful we require visionary leadership
    and a long term, sustained commitment of energy
    and resources for research, education and
    innovation (the low hanging fruit has been picked
    and even greater human capital must be invested
    to get at the next tranche).
  • There are huge gains to Alberta from greening
    up fossil fuels make this a key focus
  • A major component of this should be technology
    and policies to advance next generation in situ
    oil sands technology, enhanced oil recovery and
    unconventional gas

44
Observations and Strategies
  • Ensure environmental elements (including water
    and carbon) are fully costed and internalized in
    market decisions develop integrated energy and
    environmental market systems (a well functioning
    market can find efficient and sustainable
    solutions in a very complex and dynamic energy
    and environmental system (note that we are
    talking about market systems framed and designed
    to serve the goal of efficient, economic,
    responsible and orderly development and growth).
  • Large opportunities will come from integration
    alternatives that are not viable on a stand alone
    basis become viable. Here we include integrated
    energy and environment solutions (eg carbon
    capture, use and sequestration) and
    polygeneration (multiple products,
    diversification and high value added). Ensure
    that policies and regulation do not prevent
    achievement of gains from integration.

45
Observations and Strategies
  • Do not believe that technology will or can by
    itself solve most of the difficult problems.
    Creating the appropriate incentives and
    environment is extremely important. Most of the
    solutions will involve a multifaceted approach
    for example, see the next slide from an AERI
    presentation.
  • Ensure careful technology and policy screening
    and assessments are imbedded (including newer
    tools such as life cycle or full cycle analysis)
    in decision making.
  • Standardize as much as possible harness the
    power of markets, for example with regulated
    limits and cap and trade systems.

46
Need for a new paradigm for deployment
e.g. climate change
47
Thank you !
  • Contact Information
  • The Institute for Sustainable Energy,
    Environment and Economy
  • Room 220, CCIT Bldg.
  • University of Calgary
  • 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4
  • Ph. 403-220-6100 Fx. 403-210-9770 info_at_iseee.ca
  • www.iseee.ca
  • (You may also email me directly
    rmansell_at_ucalgary.ca)
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