User:Watti Renew/Sandbox/World energy resources and consumption
World energy resources and consumption
In 6 years from 2005 to 2011 world annual oil production increased 2 %, gas production 18 % and coal production 32 % of which 70 % was in China and 8 % on India.
World annual coal production increased 1,905 Mt or 32 % in 6 year from 2005 to 2011. Of this increase over 70 % was in China and 8 % on India.
World annual oil production increased 88 Mt and 2 % in 6 years from 2005 to 2011.
World annual gas production increased 516 Mt and 18 % in 6 years from 2005 to 2011.
Category:Natural gas by country Category:Coal by country Category:Petroleum by country
2012
editTop coal producers in 2012 were (Mt): China 3,549, United States 935, India 595, Indonesia 443, Australia 421, Russia 354, South Africa 259, Germany 197, Poland 144 and Kazakhstan 126. In 2012 total coal production was 7,831 Mt. [1]
The top hard coal net exporters in 2012 were (Mt): Indonesia 383, Australia 302, United States 106, Russia 103, Colombia 82, South Africa 72, Kazakhstan 32, Canada 25, Mongolia 22 and Vietnam 18. In 2012 total coal net export was 1,168Mt. [1]
Top oil producers: According to IEA top 10 oil producer countries produced over 64 % of the world oil production in 2012. The top oil producers in 2012 were: Saudi Arabia 544 Mt (13 %), Russia 520 Mt (13 %), United States 387 Mt (9 %), China 206 Mt (5%), Iran 186 Mt (4 %), Canada 182 Mt (4 %), United Arab Emirates 163 Mt (4 %), Venezuela 162 Mt (4 %), Kuwait 152 Mt (4 %) and Iraq 148 Mt (4 %). In 2012 total oil production was 4,142 Mt. [1]
Top gas producers: According to IEA natural gas production was 3,435 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2012 and 3,101 bcm in 2009. Top ten gas producers in 2012 were (66 % of total): United States 19.8 %, Russia 19.1 %, Qatar 4.7 %, Iran 4.6 %, Canada 4.6 %, Norway 3.3 %, China 3.1 %, Saudi-Arabia 2.8 %, Netherlands 2.3 % and Indonesia]] 2.2 %.%). [1]
2011
edit- Top 10 natural gas producers in 2011 were (66.7 % of total) (bcm): 1) Russia 677 (20.0 %), 2) United States 651 (19.2 %), 3) Canada 160 (4.7 %), 4) Qatar 151 (4.5 %), 5) Iran 149 (4.4 %), 6) Norway 106 (3.1 %), 7) China 103 (3.0 %), 8) Saudi Arabia 92 (2.7 %), 9) Indonesia 92 (2.7 %), 10) Netherlands 81 (2.4 %).[1].
- Top 10 oil producers in 2011 were (63 % of total) (Mt): 1)Saudi Arabia 517 (12.9 %), 2)Russia 510 (12.7 %), 3)United States 346 (8.6 %), 4)Iran 215 (5.4 %), 5)China 203 (5.1 %), 6)Canada 169 (4.2 %), 7)United Arab Emirates 149 (3.7 %), 8)Venezuela 148 (3.7 %), 9)Mexico 144 (3.6 %), 10)Nigeria 139 (3.5 %). [2].
- Top 10 coal producers in 2011 were (98.7 % of total) (Mt): 1)China 3,576 (46%), 2)United States 1,004 (13 %), 3)India 586 (8%), 4)Australia 414 (5 %), 5)Indonesia 376 (5 %), 6)Russia 334 %), 7)South Africa 253 (3 %), 8)Germany 189 (2 %), 9)Poland 139 (2 %) and 10)Kazakhstan 117 (2 %). [3].
Top oil producers: According to IEA top 10 countries produced over 63 % of the world oil production in 2011. Top 10 oil producers in 2011 were (Mt): Saudi Arabia 517 (12.9 %), Russia 510 (12.7 %), United States 346 (8.6 %), Iran 215 (5.4 %), China 203 (5.1 %), Canada 169 (4.2 %), United Arab Emirates 149 (3.7 %), Venezuela 148 (3.7 %), Mexico 144 (3.6 %), Nigeria 139 (3.5 %), Rest of the world 1 471 (36.6 %), World 4 011 (100 %).[2]
Top gas producers: According to IEA natural gas production was 3,149 billion cubic meters (bcm) in 2008 and 3,388 bcm in 2011. Top 10 gas producers in 2011 were (66.7 % of total) (bcm): Russia 677 (20.0 %), United States 651 (19.2 %), Canada 160 (4.7 %), Qatar 151 (4.5 %), Iran 149 (4.4 %), Norway 106 (3.1 %), China 103 (3.0 %), Saudi Arabia 92 (2.7 %), Indonesia 92 (2.7 %), Netherlands 81 (2.4 %) and World 3 388 (100 %).[2]
Top 10 coal producers in 2011 were (Mt): China 3,576 (46%), United States 1,004 (13 %), India 586 (8%), Australia 414 (5 %), Indonesia 376 (5 %), Russia 334 (4 %), South Africa 253 (3 %), Germany 189 (2 %), Poland 139 (2 %) and Kazakhstan 117 (2 %).[3]
Top 10 coal producers in 2010 (2009) were (Mt): China 3,162 (2,971), United States 997 (985), India 571 (561), Australia 420 (399), Indonesia 336 (301), Russia 324 (297), South Africa 255 (247), Kazakhstan 111 (101), Poland 134 (135) and Colombia 74 (73).[4] [5]
According to IEA (2012) the climate goal of limiting warming to 2 °C is becoming more difficult and costly with each year that passes. If action is not taken before 2017, all the allowable CO2 emissions would be locked-in by energy infrastructure existing in 2017. Fossil fuels are dominant in the global energy mix, supported by $523 billion subsidies in 2011, up almost 30% on 2010 and six times more than subsidies to renewable.[6]
In 2010 natural gas production was 3,282 bcm, net export 808 bcm and net import 820 bcm. Thus the share of gas export of the gas production in 2010 was about 25 %. Most of the natural gas (75 %) is used in the country of origin. However, products made with the energy can be exported.
In 2010 hard coal production was 6,186 Mt, net hard coal export 856 Mt and net import 949 Mt. Thus the share of hard coal export of the production in 2010 was about 15 %. Most of the coal (85 %) is used in the country of origin. However, products made with the coal energy can be exported. The majority of the Chinese and Asian Christmas presents and other products are made with coal energy.
Oil data is from the year 2009. In 2009 oil production was 3,843 Mt, net export 1,895 Mt and net import 2,002 Mt. Thus the share of oil export of the production in 2009 was about 52 % . About half of the oil (48 %) is used in the country of origin. Products made with oil energy can be exported. Oil is major transportation energy, including tourism and the transportation of the products.
According to IEA key statistics the world fuel production increased by fuel from 2005 to 2010: Hard and brown coal 23.0%, oil 1.3% and natural gas 14.3%.
According to IEA key statistics the world fuel production increased by fuel from 2009 to 2010: Hard and brown coal 4.7%, oil 3.4% and natural gas 5.8%.
The global warming emissions are the most serious global environmental problem. Therefore many nations have signed the UN agreement to prevent a dangerous influences in the climate system. What is dangerous concentration is a political issue rather than scientific issue. Limiting global temperature rise at 2 %, considered as a high risk level by Stockholm Environmental Institute, demands 75 % decline in carbon emissions in the industrial countries by 2050, if the population is 10 mrd in 2050. [7] 75 % in 40 years is about 2 % decrease every year. As 2011, the warming emissions of energy production continued rising regardless of the consensus of the basic problem. There is a 25-30 years lag in the complete warming effect of emissions. Thus human activities have created already a 1,5 °C temperature rise (2006).[8] According to Robert Engelman (Worldwatch institute) for security civilization has to stop increase of emissions within a decade regardless of economy and population state (2009).[9]
Consumption
editRegional energy use (kWh/hab)[10] [11] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
kWh/capita | Ratio | Population (milj) | Ratio | |||
1990 | 2008 | 2008/1990 | 1990 | 2008 | 2008/1990 | |
USA | 89,021 | 87,216 | 0.98 | 250 | 305 | 1.22 |
EU-27 | 40,240 | 40,821 | 1.01 | 473 | 499 | 1.05 |
Middle East | 19,422 | 34,774 | 1.79 | 132 | 199 | 1.51 |
China | 8,839 | 18,608 | 2.11 | 1,141 | 1,333 | 1.17 |
Latin America | 11,281 | 14,421 | 1.28 | 355 | 462 | 1.30 |
Africa | 7,094 | 7,792 | 1.10 | 634 | 984 | 1.55 |
India | 4,419 | 6,280 | 1.42 | 850 | 1,140 | 1.34 |
The World | 19,422 | 21,283 | 1.10 | 5,265 | 6,688 | 1.27 |
Source: IEA/OECD, Population OECD/World Bank |
Primary energy
editEnergy by power source 2008 [12] | ||
---|---|---|
TWh | % | |
Oil | 48,204 | 33,5 % |
Coal | 38,497 | 26,8 % |
Gas | 30,134 | 20,9 % |
Nuclear | 8,283 | 5,8 % |
Hydro | 3,208 | 2,2 % |
Other RE* | 15,284 | 10,6 % |
Others | 241 | 0,2 % |
Total | 143,851 | 100 % |
Source: IEA *`=solar, wind, geothermal and biofuels |
In 2008 energy supply by power source was oil 33.5 %, coal 26.8 %, gas 20.8 % (fossil 81 %), renewable (hydro, solar, wind, geothermal power and biofuels) 12.9 %, nuclear 5.8 % and other 4 %. Oil was the most popular energy fuel. Oil and coal combined represented over 60 % of the world energy supply in 2008.
Energy by sector
editWorld energy use per sector [13] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | 2008 | 2000 | 2008 | |
TWh | %* | |||
Industry | 21,733 | 27,273 | 26.5 % | 27.8 % |
Transport | 22,563 | 26,742 | 27.5 % | 27.3 % |
Residential and service | 30,555 | 35,319 | 37.3 % | 36.0 % |
Non-energy use | 7,119 | 8,688 | 8.7 % | 8.9 % |
Total* | 81,970 | 98,022 | 100 % | 100 % |
Source: IEA 2010, Total is calculated from the given sectors Numbers are the end use of energy Total world energy supply (2008) 143,851 TWh |
Total world energy use per sector was in 2008 industry 28 %, transport 27 % and residential and service 36 %. Division was about the same in the year 2000.[13]
By fuels
editCoal
editIn 2000 coal was used in China 28 %, other Asia 19 %,North America 25 % and the EU 14 %. In 2009 the share of China was 47 %.)[14]
Single most coal using country is China. It s share of the world coal production was 28 % in 2000 and 48 % in 2009. Coal use in the world increased 48 % from 2000 to 2009. In practise majority of this growth occurred in China and the rest in other Asia.
Indonesia and Australia export 57.1 % of the world coal export.
Regional coal supply (TWh) and share 2010 (%)[14][15] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | 2008 | 2009* | 2010* | %* | Change 2000-2009* | |
North America | 6,654 | 6,740 | 6,375 | 6,470 | 16% | -1.2 % |
Asia excl. China | 5,013 | 7,485 | 7,370 | 7,806 | 19% | 18.9 % |
China | 7,318 | 16,437 | 18,449 | 19,928 | 48% | 85.5 % |
EU | 3,700 | 3,499 | 3,135 | 3,137 | 8% | -3.8 % |
Africa | 1,049 | 1,213 | 1,288 | 1,109 | 3% | 0.4 % |
Russia | 1,387 | 1,359 | 994 | 1,091 | 3% | -2.0 % |
Others | 1,485 | 1,763 | 1,727 | 1,812 | 4% | 2.2 % |
Total | 26,607 | 38,497 | 39,340 | 41,354 | 100% | 100 % |
Source: IEA, *in 2009, 2010 BP* Change 2000-2009: Region's share of the world change +12,733 TWh from 2000 to 2009 |
Top 10 coal producers (Mt)[2] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | Share % 2011 | ||
1 | China | 2,226 | 2,761 | 2,971 | 3,162 | 3,576 | 46 % |
2 | US | 1,028 | 1,076 | 985 | 997 | 1,004 | 13 % |
3 | India | 430 | 521 | 561 | 571 | 586 | 8 % |
4 | Australia | 372 | 397 | 399 | 420 | 414 | 5 % |
5 | Indonesia | 318 | 284 | 301 | 336 | 376 | 5 % |
6 | Russia | 222 | 323 | 297 | 324 | 334 | 4 % |
7 | South Africa | 315 | 236 | 247 | 255 | 253 | 3 % |
8 | Germany | nd | nd | nd | nd | 189 | 2% |
9 | Poland | 160 | 144 | 135 | 134 | 139 | 2 % |
10 | Kazakhstan | 79 | 108 | 101 | 111 | 117 | 2 % |
11 | Colombia | 65 | 79 | 73 | 74 | 1 % | nd |
Total | 5,878 | 6,796 | 6,903 | 7,229 | 7,783 | 100 % | |
Top ten | 89 % | 87 % | 88 % | 88% | nd | 90% | |
* include hard coal and brown coal |
Top 10 coal importers (Mt)[16] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | |||
1 | China | 25 | nd | 114 | 157 | 177 | |
2 | Japan | 178 | 186 | 165 | 187 | 175 | |
3 | South Korea | 77 | 100 | 103 | 119 | 129 | |
4 | India | 37 | 58 | 66 | 88 | 101 | |
5 | Taiwan | 61 | 66 | 60 | 63 | 66 | |
6 | Germany | 38 | 46 | 38 | 45 | 41 | |
7 | UK | 44 | 43 | 38 | 26 | 32 | |
8 | Turkey | nd | 19 | 20 | 27 | 24 | |
9 | Italy | 24 | 25 | 19 | 22 | 23 | |
10 | Malaysia | nd | nd | nd | 19 | 21 | |
x | Spain | 25 | 19 | 16 | nd | nd | |
x | France | nd | 21 | nd | nd | nd | |
x | US | 28 | nd | nd | nd | nd | |
Total | 778 | 778 | 819 | 949 | 1,002 | ||
Top ten | 69 % | 75 % | 78 % | 79% | 79 % | ||
Import of production | 16 % | 13 % | 14 % | 15 % | 13 % | ||
* 2005-2010 hard coal |
Top 10 coal exporters (Mt)[2] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 2011 | Share 2011 % | ||
1 | Indonesia | 162 | 309 | 29.7 % |
2 | Australia | 298 | 285 | 27.4 % |
3 | Russia | 89 | 99 | 9.5% |
4 | US | 57 | 85 | 8.2 % |
5 | Colombia | 68 | 76 | 7.3 % |
6 | South Africa | 68 | 70 | 6.7 % |
7 | Kazakhstan | 33 | 34 | 3.3 % |
8 | Canada | 24 | 24 | 2.3 % |
9 | Vietnam | 21 | 23 | 2.2% |
10 | Mongolia | 17 | 22 | 2.1% |
x | Others | 19 | 14 | 1.3% |
Total (Mt) | 856 | 1041 | ||
Top ten | 97.8 % | 98.7 % |
Oil
editAccording to BP the top oil reserves were in Saudi Arabia 18 %, Canada 12 %, mostly oil sands, Venezuela 12 %, Iran 9 %, Iraq 8 %, Kuwait 7 %, UAE 7 % and Russia 5 %. [17]
The use of oil doubled in China during 2000-2009. In 2009 the consumption of oil was in the EU 1,6 fold and North America 2.5 fold compared to China.[18]
Top 10 oil producers (Mt)[2] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | Share 2011 | ||
1 | Saudi Arabia | 519 | 509 | 452 | 471 | 517 | 12.9 % |
2 | Russia | 470 | 485 | 494 | 502 | 510 | 12.7 % |
3 | United States | 307 | 300 | 320 | 336 | 346 | 8.6 % |
4 | Iran | 205 | 214 | 206 | 227 | 215 | 5.4 % |
5 | China | 183 | 190 | 194 | 200 | 203 | 5.1 % |
6 | Canada | 143 | 155 | 152 | 159 | 169 | 4.2 % |
7 | UAE | nd | 136 | 120 | 129 | 149 | 3.7 % |
8 | Venezuela | 162 | 137 | 126 | 149 | 148 | 3.7 % |
9 | Mexico | 188 | 159 | 146 | 144 | 144 | 3.6 % |
10 | Nigeria | 133 | nd | nd | 130 | 139 | 3.5 % |
x | Kuwait | nd | 145 | 124 | nd | nd | nd |
x | Norway | 139 | nd | nd | nd | nd | nd |
Total | 3,923 | 3,941 | 3,843 | 3,973 | 4,011 | 100 % | |
Top ten | 62 % | 62 % | 61 % | 62% | 63 % |
Top 10 oil exporters (Mt)[2] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 2011 | Share 2011 % | ||
1 | Saudi Arabia | 333 | 17.0 % | |
2 | Russia | 246 | 12.5 % | |
3 | Nigeria | 129 | 6.6% | |
4 | Iran | 126 | 6.4 % | |
5 | UAE | 105 | 5.4 % | |
6 | Iraq | 94 | 4.8 % | |
7 | Venezuela | 87 | 4.4 % | |
8 | Angola | 84 | 4.3 % | |
9 | Norway | 78 | 4.0% | |
10 | Mexico | 71 | 3.6% | |
x | Others | 609 | 31.0% | |
Total (Mt) | 1,962 |
Regional oil supply (TWh) and share 2010 (%) [18][19] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | 2008 | 2009* | 2010* | % | |
North America | 12,350 | 12,590 | 12,305 | 12,092 | 26 % |
Asia excl. China | 8,510 | 9,217 | 9,620 | 9,760 | 21 % |
China | 2,490 | 4,130 | 4,855 | 4,984 | 11 % |
EU | 7,980 | 8,055 | 8,050 | 7,705 | 16 % |
Africa | 1,482 | 1,624 | 1,730 | 1,808 | 4 % |
Russia | 2,138 | 2,828 | 1,499 | 1,717 | 4 % |
Others | 8,562 | 9,761 | 8,526 | 8,781 | 19 % |
Total | 43,506 | 48,204 | 46,585 | 46,847 | 100 % |
Source: IEA, *in 2009, 2010 BP |
Gas
editAccording to BP in 2009 the highest proved gas reserves were in Russia 24 %, Iran 16 % and Qatar 14 %.[17]
Top 10 natural gas producers (bcm)[2] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | Share 2011 | ||
1 | Russia | 627 | 657 | 589 | 637 | 677 | 20.0 % |
2 | US | 517 | 583 | 594 | 613 | 651 | 19.2 % |
3 | Canada | 187 | 175 | 159 | 160 | 160 | 4.7 % |
4 | Qatar | nd | 79 | 89 | 121 | 151 | 4.5 % |
5 | Iran | 84 | 121 | 144 | 145 | 149 | 4.4 % |
6 | Norway | 90 | 103 | 106 | 107 | 106 | 3.1 % |
7 | China | nd | 76 | 90 | 97 | 103 | 3.0 % |
8 | Saudi Arabia | 70 | nd | nd | 82 | 92 | 2.7 % |
9 | Indonesia | 77 | 77 | 76 | 88 | 92 | 2.7 % |
10 | Netherlands | 79 | 85 | 79 | 89 | 81 | 2.4 % |
x | Algeria | 93 | 82 | 81 | nd | nd | nd |
x | UK | 93 | nd | nd | nd | nd | nd |
Total | 2,872 | 3,149 | 3,101 | 3,282 | 100 % | 3,388 | |
Top ten | 67 % | 65 % | 65 % | 65 % | 67 % | ||
bcm = billion cubic meters |
Top 10 natural gas importers (bcm)[2] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | Share 2011 | ||
1 | Japan | 81 | 95 | 93 | 99 | 116 | 13.9 % |
2 | Italy | 73 | 77 | 69 | 75 | 70 | 8.4 % |
3 | Germany | 91 | 79 | 83 | 83 | 68 | 8.2 % |
4 | US | 121 | 84 | 76 | 74 | 55 | 6.6 % |
5 | South Korea | 29 | 36 | 33 | 43 | 47 | 5.6 % |
6 | Ukraine | 62 | 53 | 38 | 37 | 44 | 5.3 % |
7 | Turkey | 27 | 36 | 35 | 37 | 43 | 5.2 % |
8 | France | 47 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 41 | 4.9 % |
9 | UK | nd | 26 | 29 | 37 | 37 | 4.4 % |
10 | Spain | 33 | 39 | 34 | 36 | 34 | 4.1 % |
x | Netherlands | 23 | nd | nd | nd | nd | nd |
Total | 838 | 783 | 749 | 820 | 834 | 100 % | |
Top ten | 70 % | 73 % | 71 % | 69 % | 67 % | ||
Import of production | 29 % | 25 % | 24 % | 25 % | 25 % | ||
bcm = billion cubic meters |
Regional gas supply (TWh) and share 2010 (%)[20] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | 2008 | 2009* | 2010* | % | |
North America | 7,621 | 7,779 | 8,839 | 8,925 | 27% |
Asia excl. China | 2,744 | 4,074 | 4,348 | 4,799 | 14 % |
China | 270 | 825 | 1,015 | 1,141 | 3 % |
EU | 4,574 | 5,107 | 4,967 | 5,155 | 16 % |
Africa | 612 | 974 | 1,455 | 1,099 | 3 % |
Russia | 3,709 | 4,259 | 4,209 | 4,335 | 13 % |
Latin America | 1,008 | 1,357 | 958 | nd | nd |
Others | 3,774 | 5,745 | 6,047 | 7,785 | 23 % |
Total | 24,312 | 30,134 | 31,837 | 33,240 | 100 % |
Source: IEA, in 2009, 2010 BP |
Reserves
editCoal
editOil
editGas
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d Key world statistics 2013 IEA page 11 gas, page 13 oil, page 15 coal Cite error: The named reference "IEA2013" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b c d e f g h Key world statistics 2012 IEA Cite error: The named reference "IEA2012" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ IEA Key energy statistics 2012
- ^ IEA Key energy statistics 2010 pages 11, 21
- ^ IEA Key World Energy Statistics 2011 October 2011
- ^ IEA World Energy Outlook 2012 Executive Summary
- ^ Energiläget 2050 by prof. Cristian Azar and Kristian Lindgren Chalmers Göteborg (in Swedish)
- ^ Paul Brown, Global Warming, The last chance for change, London 2006, pages. 165, 16, 43-45, 13
- ^ State of the world 2009, Worldwatch institute, 2009
- ^ Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 55 Regional energy use, 1990 and 2008 (kWh per capita)
- ^ IEA Key energy statistics 2010 Population page 48 forward
- ^ Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 46 Total world energy supply, 1990–2009, Table 53 Global supply of renewable energy, 1990–2008 (TWh)
- ^ a b Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 56 Total world energy use per sector 1990–2008 (TWh)
- ^ a b Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 52 Global supply of coal, 1990–2009 (TWh) Cite error: The named reference "energisve2010Coal" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Energiläget 2011
- ^ IEA Key World Energy Statistics 2011, 2010, 2009, 2006 IEA October, crude oil p.11, coal p. 13 gas p. 15
- ^ a b 2011 report on oil and gas companies, Promoting revenue Transparency Transparency International 2011 pages 113-115 Cite error: The named reference "TI2011" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 47 Global supply of oil, 1990–2009 (TWh)
- ^ Energiläget 2011
- ^ Energy in Sweden 2010, Facts and figures Table 50 Global supply of gas 1990–2009 (TWh)