LONDON - Wednesday, January 21st 2015 [ME NewsWire]
(BUSINESS
WIRE) -- Energy leaders see price volatility and the future of a
climate framework as their top critical uncertainties, according to the
latest World Energy Issues Monitor published by the World Energy
Council, the UN-accredited global energy body.
The 7th edition of the
Council’s annual survey of over 1000 energy leaders including ministers
and CEOs from nearly 80 countries concludes that the uncertain impact
of volatile energy and commodity prices, first highlighted as an
emerging priority by the Council in 2014, has become the number-one
issue worldwide. Energy leaders are particularly worried about the
plunge in oil price to its five-year low. They are also kept busy by the
continual reduction in the cost of renewables, which has resulted in
their improving share in the energy mix, while also putting additional
strain on the wider energy system especially in regions without viable
storage technologies.
“High price volatility has become the new
normal facing energy leaders and this is the context in which we expect
them to take investment decisions at an unprecedented scale.” said
Christoph Frei, World Energy Council’s Secretary General. “The
unprecedented uncertainty, the need to redefine infrastructure
resilience in response to emerging risks, the expectation of changing
market designs and evolving business models, as well as the changing
geopolitical balance has placed energy among the top strategic issues
globally for at least the next decade.”
Climate framework is
perceived as the next most critical uncertainty ahead of a global
climate agreement being reached at the Conference of the Parties meeting
(COP-21) in Paris at the end of this year. This issue – which could
spell the presence or absence of a meaningful carbon price – has been a
top critical uncertainty since the first World Energy Issues Monitor in
2009.
The report also goes on to highlight energy storage and the
quest for energy finance as issues that continue to keep leaders busy,
with energy subsidies an area needing urgent action.
Regional differences are also investigated, including 27 national deep-dives:
Africa: subsidies, affordability, capital markets
Asia: large-scale accidents, extreme weather risks
Europe: Russia–Europe, nuclear
Latin America & Caribbean: capital markets, LNG
Middle East & North Africa: coal, LNG, energy efficiency
North America: electric storage, China–India
Download report: www.worldenergy.org/publications
Contacts
World Energy Council
Monique Tsang,
+44 2032140616
tsang@worldenergy.org
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