The way oil and gas companies tell it, their best days are still ahead of them thanks to fast-growing emerging economies with insatiable appetites for energy.
The reality taking hold, however, shows an entirely different historical trend at work: Wind- and solar-powered sources today are providing a low-cost alternative to natural gas, coal and diesel in these countries, where the vast majority of the world’s population lives.
The numbers are jarring.
Climate Scope 2014, a report published last month by Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), delves deeply into the shift, analyzing electricity prices in 55 developing countries.
BNEF’s findings:
The takeaway for investors is that solar will become as attractive as wind in a very short period of time and that both of them will leave hydrocarbons behind as the high-cost alternative in emerging markets. It’s a complete reversal from just a few years ago.
BNEF, by the way, isn’t alone in its assessment. Similar conclusions have been reached recently by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate, an international partnership of eight research groups.
Here’s an excerpt from that work: “A massive wave of energy infrastructure investment is coming: to keep up with development needs, around US$45 trillion may need to be invested in the next 15 years. This gives countries a chance to build robust, flexible energy systems that will serve them well for decades to come, but it also represents a critical window to avoid locking-in technologies that expose them to future market volatility, air pollution, and other environmental and social stresses.”
A monumental wealth creation event is taking shape, in other words, and the big value-appreciation potential points in the direction of renewables.
There’s no reason to think this trend will change, a truth that puts hydrocarbon investing at risk.
Deborah Rogers is an IEEFA energy consultant and president of Energy Policy Forum.