The main thing standing in the way of realizing RMI's goals is the adamant opposition of the wealthy and politically powerful fossil fuel industry, due to all too obvious, self-serving avarice.
Yet, some fossil fuel companies, like BP are reading the handwriting on the wall and are beginning to advocate transition away from dependence on fossil fuels. BP report: Oil is dying, long live green energy
The report looks at three scenarios to explore energy transition to 2050. BP writes that “the scenarios help to illustrate the range of outcomes possible over the next 30 years, although the uncertainty is substantial and the scenarios do not provide a comprehensive description of all possible outcomes.”
BP’s three scenarios are Rapid Transition (carbon emissions from energy use to fall by around 70% by 2050), Net Zero (carbon emissions from energy use fall by over 95% by 2050), and Business-as-usual (emissions in 2050 less than 10% below 2018 levels). But what unites all three scenarios is this:
As a result of these policies and shifts in societal preferences, there is a decline in the share of hydrocarbons (coal, oil, and natural gas) in the global energy system in all three scenarios. This is matched by a corresponding increase in the role of renewable energy as the world increasingly electrifies. The scale of this shift varies significantly across the three scenarios, with the share of hydrocarbons in primary energy declining from around 85% in 2018 to between 70-20% by 2050 and the share of renewable energy increasing to between 20-60%.
In BP’s first two scenarios, COVID-19 accelerates the slowdown in oil consumption, leading to it peaking last year. In its Business-as-usual scenario, oil demand peaks by 2030.
BP chief economist Spencer Dale said:
[The energy transition] would be an unprecedented event. Never in modern history has the demand for any traded fuel declined in absolute terms.
[Meanwhile,] the share of renewable energy grows more quickly than any fuel ever seen in history.
Electrek’s Take
Let’s just take a minute to fully absorb the enormity of this report: BP is a global oil giant. And it is stating that fossil fuels will be replaced by green energy such as wind, solar, and hydropower because oil has reached its peak as a result of the pandemic.
So it’s no surprise, as Electrek reported September 11, that BP invested $1.1 billion in offshore wind in the US. It’s good environmental sense. It’s good business sense. BP isn’t being benevolent; it knows that’s where the market is going.