JP Morgan: world needs additional $1.3 T investment into energy

USA: The world needs to find $1.3 T of incremental investment by 2030 to boost all types of energy output and infrastructure, said US bank JP Morgan

 


JP Morgan energy outlook

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USA: The world needs to find $1.3 T of incremental investment by 2030 to boost all types of energy output and infrastructure to avoid an energy crunch, US bank JP Morgan said in its first annual energy outlook.

“Our main finding is that by 2030, energy demand growth will exceed supply growth by circa 20 % based on current trends, primarily driven by emerging economies and their efforts to develop and lift their citizens out of poverty,” strategists Marko Kolanovic and Christyan Malek said.

Investment will need to be inclusive of all fuels, including oil and gas, renewables and nuclear, with oil demand alone expected to grow by around 10 % by 2030 and gas by 18 %.

“Not all fuels are made equal, and for the most part (and within this time horizon), different sources of energy are not fully fungible – solar panels cannot replace oil, needed for example in the industrial production of petrochemicals,” said the outlook, to which 30 JP Morgan analysts contributed.

The research contrasts with the message from the International Energy Agency (IEA), which last year said no new investment was needed in fossil fuels.

“Until scalable, reliable, clean and affordable technologies are available, the world will need to work with all of the current sources of energy – fossil and non-fossil – and their respective drawbacks,” said in JP Morgan’s outlook.

It said global end-use spending on energy was set to rise to 9.5 % of GDP in 2022 from a 2015-2019 average of 8.4 %.

A further increase in energy costs would pose a greater probability of societal unrest and a slowdown in the energy transition, JP Morgan said.

 

Source: CNBC TV18