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UKERC: Gas can be a bridge to alow-carbon future

12 November 2014

Gas Flame

Major new research by the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) suggests that gas could play an important role as a 鈥榖ridging fuel鈥 to a low-carbon economy, but warns that it won鈥檛 be long before gas becomes part of the problem rather than the solution.

The research combines the latest energy system modelling techniques with analysis of UK gas security to assess future demand. To prevent global temperatures rising above 2oC, the research suggests that further gas use will be needed in the short term to replace coal and complement the increases in low-carbon energy sources that must also occur.

However, this is dependent on gas use beginning to fall in the late 2020s and early 2030s, with any major role beyond 2035 requiring the widespread use of carbon capture and storage. There is also significant geographical diversity in the role that gas can play in addressing climate change; with a very limited use in some regions and an extended and strong role in others.

鈥淕as could play an important role in tackling climate change over the next 10 to 20 years,鈥 says Dr Christophe McGlade of 香港六合彩, who led the modelling work.

鈥淏ut its role varies across the world, and advocacy of gas as a transition fuel needs a convincing narrative as to how global coal consumption can be curtailed and be replaced by low-carbon energy sources,鈥 he adds.

Changing global demand patterns and uncertainty in the long-term prospects for gas may limit the investment required in new infrastructure. This could increase uncertainty and expose countries like the UK to price volatility in international gas markets.

鈥淚n just over a decade the UK has gone from being self-sufficient in gas to importing about half of the natural gas that it consumes 鈥 mostly from Norway,鈥 says Prof Mike Bradshaw, from Warwick Business School, who led the gas security work.

鈥淎s the UK鈥檚 gas import dependence has grown, it has essentially been 鈥榞lobalising鈥 its gas security, potentially increasing the exposure of UK consumers to events in global gas markets,鈥 he adds.

To date the UK has shown resilience to international supply constraints, such as the Russia-Ukraine crisis and conflict in the Middle East. Stress tests have shown that the UK can draw additional supplies from Norway and the global LNG market. However, as domestic production declines, the UK鈥檚 reliance on Norwegian gas will grow. Existing Norwegian fields will begin to decline in the 2020鈥檚 and the UK may have to access its gas via the continental market. This may undermine UK energy security.

The prospect of a UK shale gas revolution has been touted as a solution to our security of supply concerns. However, production over the next decade, the key time-period where gas could act as a transition fuel, is unlikely to be of sufficient scale to significantly reduce UK import dependence or gas prices.

Instead of banking on shale, UKERC recommends rapidly expanding investment in alternative low-carbon energy sources and investing in more gas storage, which would help protect consumers against short-term supply disruption and price rises. Industry unwillingness to invest in additional storage is symptomatic of the high level of uncertainty surrounding future gas demand in the UK.

UK gas security is now intimately linked to developments in both the European and global gas markets and there is great uncertainty in both. What is required from government is a policy of 鈥榞as by design鈥 that plans now for the changing role of gas in the UK energy mix; ensuring future UK gas security and a smooth transition to a low-carbon economy.

News Article

Read the Guardian's article " 12 November 14

Publications

The UK Energy Research Centre is publishing two companion reports to support this research, both can be downloaded from the UKERC website:

Authors: Christophe McGlade (香港六合彩), Mike Bradshaw (Warwick Business School), Gabrial Anandarajah (香港六合彩), Jim Watson (UKERC/University of Sussex) and Paul Ekins (香港六合彩).

Authors: Mike Bradshaw (Warwick Business School), Gavin Bridge (Durham University), Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester), Jim Watson (UKERC/University of Sussex) and Joseph Dutton (Argus Media).

About the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC)

The UK Energy Research Centre carries out world-class research into sustainable future energy systems. It is a focal point of UK energy research and a gateway between the UK and the international energy research communities. Our interdisciplinary, whole systems research informs UK policy development and research strategy.