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2023年世界能源投资报告(英文版)-国际能源署(IEA).pdf

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2023年世界能源投资报告(英文版)-国际能源署(IEA).pdf

World Energy Investment 2023The IEA examines the full spectrum of energy issues including oil, gas and coal supply and demand, renewable energy technologies, electricity markets, energy efficiency, access to energy, demand side management and much more. Through its work, the IEA advocates policies that will enhance the reliability, affordability and sustainability of energy in its 31 member countries, 11 association countries and beyond. This publication and any map included herein are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory, to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area. Source IEA. International Energy Agency Website www.iea.org IEA member countries Australia Austria Belgium Canada Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Japan Korea Lithuania Luxembourg Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland Portugal Slovak Republic INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY Spain Sweden Switzerland Republic of Trkiye United Kingdom United States The European Commission also participates in the work of the IEA IEA association countries Argentina Brazil China Egypt India Indonesia Morocco Singapore South Africa Thailand Ukraine Revised version, May 2023 Information notice found www.iea.org/corrections World Energy Investment 2023 PAGE | 3 Abstract Abstract This year’s edition of the World Energy Investment provides a full update on the investment picture in 2022 and an initial reading of the emerging picture for 2023. The report provides a global benchmark for tracking capital flows in the energy sector and examines how investors are assessing risks and opportunities across all areas of fuel and electricity supply, critical minerals, efficiency, research and development and energy finance. It focuses on some important features of the new investment landscape that are already visible, including the policies now in place that reinforce incentives for clean energy spending, the energy security lens through which many investments are now viewed, widespread cost and inflationary pressures, the major boost in revenues that high fuel prices are bringing to traditional suppliers, and burgeoning expectations in many countries that investments will be aligned with solutions to the climate crisis. IEA. CC BY 4.0. World Energy Investment 2023 PAGE | 4 Table of contents Table of contents Introduction 5 Overview and key findings . 7 Power sector 25 Overview of power investment . 26 Generation . 31 Final investment decisions FIDs 41 Electricity grids and battery storage . 48 Implications 55 Fuel supply . 58 Overview 59 Upstream oil and gas . 66 Midstream and downstream oil and gas 73 Oil and gas industry transitions 79 Low-emission fuels . 84 Coal 97 Critical minerals 101 Implications 105 Energy end use and efficiency . 108 Buildings . 111 Transport 117 Industry 124 Implications 128 R “Other end use” refers to renewables for end use and electrification in the buildings, transport and industrial sectors. The terms grids and networks are used interchangeably in this report and do not distinguish between transmission and distribution; 2023e estimated values for 2023 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e Upstream oil and gas Midstream oil and gas Coal Low- emission fuels Renewables Fossil Grids and storage Nuclear Efficiency Electrification and other Billion USD 2022 Fuel supply investment Power investment End use investment IEA. CC BY 4.0. World Energy Investment 2023 PAGE | 10 Overview and key findings Renewables, led by solar, and EVs are leading the expected increase in clean energy investment in 2023 Annual clean energy investment, 2015-2023e IEA. CC BY 4.0. Notes “Low-emission fuels” include modern liquid and gaseous bioenergy, low-emission hydrogen and hydrogen-based fuels that do not emit any CO2 from fossil fuels directly when used and emit very little when being produced; “Other end use” refers to renewables for end use and electrification in the buildings, transport and industrial sectors. 2023e estimated values for 2023; CCUS carbon capture, utilisation and storage; EV electric vehicle. 400 800 1 200 1 600 2 000 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023e Billion USD 2022 Low-emission fuels and CCUS Nuclear Battery storage EVs Grids Other end use Energy efficiency Renewable power IEA. CC BY 4.0. World Energy Investment 2023 PAGE | 11 Overview and key findings Less than half of the oil and gas industry’s unprecedented cash flow from the energy crisis is going back into traditional supply and only a small fraction to clean technologies Distribution of cash spending by the oil and gas industry, 2008-2022 IEA. CC BY 4.0. Source IEA analysis based on data from S enhanced policy support through instruments like the US Inflation Reduction Act and new initiatives in Europe, Japan, the People’s Republic of China hereafter “China” and elsewhere; a strong alignment of climate and energy security goals, especially in import-dependent economies; and a focus on industrial strategy as countries seek to strengthen their footholds in the emerging clean energy economy. This momentum has been led by renewable power and EVs, with important contributions also from other areas such as batteries, heat pumps and nuclear power. In 2023 low-emissions power is expected to account for almost 90 of total investment in electricity generation. Solar is the star performer and more than USD 1 billion per day is expected to go into solar investments in 2023 USD 380 billion for the year as a whole, edging this spending above that in upstream oil for the first time. Consumers are investing in more electrified end uses. Demand for electric cars is booming, with sales expected to leap by more than one-third this year after a record-breaking 2022. As a result, investment in EVs defined as the incremental spending on EVs vs the average price of vehicles sold in a given country has more than doubled since 2021, reaching USD 130 billion in 2023. Global sales of heat pumps have seen double-digit growth since 2021. IEA. CC BY 4.0. World Energy Investment 2023 PAGE | 13 Overview and key findings The increase in fossil fuel investment expected in 2023 is unevenly spread around the world; less than half the cash flow available to the oil and gas industry is going back into new supply 2022 was an extraordinarily profitable year for many fossil fuel companies, as they saw revenues soar on higher fuel prices. Net income from fossil fuel sales more than doubled compared with the average in recent years, with global oil and gas producers receiving around USD 4 trillion. Our overall expectation, based on analysis of the announced spending plans of all the large and medium-sized oil, gas and coal companies, is that investment in unabated fossil fuel supply is set to rise by more than 6 in 2023, reaching USD 950 billion. The largest share of this total is going to upstream oil and gas, where investment is expected to rise by 7 in 2023 to more than USD 500 billion, bringing this indicator in aggregate back to the levels of 2019. Around half this increase is likely to be absorbed by cost inflation. Many large oil and gas companies have announced higher spending plans on the back of record revenues. But uncertainties over longer- term demand, worries about costs, and pressure from many investors and owners to focus on returns rather than production growth mean only large Middle Eastern national oil companies are spending much more in 2023 than they did in 2022, and they are the only subset of the industry spending more than pre-pandemic levels. The headline rise in spending on new oil and gas supply represents less than half of the cash flow that was available to the oil and gas industry. Between 2010 and 2019, three-quarters of cash outflows were typically invested into new supply. This is now less than half, with the majority going to dividends, share buybacks and debt repayment. Investment by the oil and gas industry in low-emissions sources of energy is less than 5 of its upstream investment. This indicator differs widely by company, with double-digit shares common among the large European companies. Investment by the industry in clean fuels, such as bioenergy, hydrogen and CCUS, is picking up in response to more supportive policies but remains well short of where it needs to be in climate-driven scenarios. Investment in coal supply is expected to rise by 10 in 2023, and is already well above pre-pandemic levels. Investment in new coal-fired power plants remains on a declining trend, but a warning sign came in 2022 with 40 GW of new coal plants being approved – the highest figure since 2016. Almost all of these were in China, reflecting the high political priority attached to energy security after severe electricity market strains in 2021 and 2022, even as China deploys a range of low-emission technologies at scale. IEA. CC BY 4.0.

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