BP Report Outlines Our Not-So-Low Carbon Future

 | Feb 19, 2015 03:19AM ET

Whether you are a fully signed up member of the Armageddon-is-just-around-the-corner-due-to –global-warming camp or a complete naysayer is, with all due respect to most of us in either camp, irrelevant.

The point is those that form policies and pass laws on the whole a) accept climate change due to human activity is a real and present danger to the future of life on earth and b) have on the whole been totally incapable of taking any action that will have the impact they (mostly) agree is needed. The reason is not hard to see, the consequences are long term, the costs are short term, and politicians work very much in the here and now. Or at least with the limited horizon of the next election. As a result (and it doesn’t make the above point, its far too diplomatic) BP’s latest long range energy report this week makes disturbing reading for anyone other than those in the complete naysayer camp.

Population growth and increases in income per person are the key drivers behind growing energy demand, the report states. By 2035, the world’s population is projected to reach 8.7 billion, which means an additional 1.6 billion people living and working here will need energy. Over the same period, GDP is expected to more than double, with non-OECD Asia contributing nearly 60% of that growth. Globally, GDP per person in 2035 is expected to be 75% higher than today. With higher GDP and a higher population, energy consumption is going to be much, much, higher, even with improvements in technology and behavior moderating the rise.

Bob Dudley, BP’s chief executive, is quoted as saying: “The most likely path for carbon emissions, despite current government policies and intentions, does not appear sustainable. The projections highlight the scale of the challenge facing policy makers at this year’s UN-led discussions due for December in Paris. No single change or policy is likely to be sufficient on its own.”