“It’s fun to be an oil and gas CEO.”
Santa Barbara, CA -- Peter Voser, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell, traveled a long way to speak at the Wall Street Journal ECO:nomics show this morning. To give you an idea of the mindset of
this particular audience, when polled on their expectations of future
fuels, the winning response was nuclear, followed by natural gas.
Which is probably accurate but not the response you'd get from a bunch
of enviros.
Shell expects global demand for energy to double by 2050.
Take
note: Shell has transformed into a natural gas company. Since 2004,
the oil giant has invested more than $15 billion in natural gas in the
United States. By 2012, they will have more gas production than other
fuels, in what he referred to as a twenty- to thirty-year journey.
This is a telling trend. Wind and solar are nice, but natural gas is
what is going to keep the world powered.
Voser reminded the
crowd that natural gas produces 50 percent to 70 percent less CO2 than
coal and that Shell has been somewhat surprised by the volume of
natural gas deposits in the U.S.
In Voser's words, "We need gas,
conventional oil, and all other sources." He added that we need coal
with carbon capture and sequestration and electromobility.
Shell
knows about automobiles and the CEO quoted a few facts, the scariest of
which was that his firm expects the number of automobiles to double to
two billion by 2050. He shocked the crowd with his forecast on
electric vehicles -- Voser said that 40 percent of automobiles will be
electric by 2050. But if EV electromobility is powered by coal, "then
we are shooting ourselves in the foot."
When it comes to
renewables, Shell is focused on biofuels and trying to get
second-generation biofuels to be economical as well as working on wind
power.
Not solar, though. They have gotten out of solar,
both in silicon and CIGS thin film. Shell can't see solar as something
that they can scale up. They are "leaving it to smaller and medium
size players."
They are also doing work in tar sands -- although
he likes the term "oil sands" -- which accounts for 2.5 percent of
their production. He thinks of it as a technology of last resort.
They've waited 40 years to go after this resource and expect that oil
sands can have the footprint of traditional oil.
Voser said, "We
need a CO2 price, not a tax," although he is "skeptical" about energy
legislation passing in the U.S. this year. He added, "What we want is
energy legislation which drives supply security and which generates new
jobs but also preserves old jobs."
Voser was in full agreement
with T. Boone Pickens on focusing on the U.S.' own reserves of natural
gas "instead of buying oil from our enemies."
Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
ContinuePosted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on November 20, 2024 at 12:40
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