Worldwide energy consumption will grow by 53% between 2008 and 2035, according to a report by the Energy Information Administration.


International Energy Outlook 2011 presents updated projections for world energy markets through 2035. However, it does not incorporate prospective legislation and public policy changes that might affect energy markets.

Much of the increase will be driven by strong economic growth in the developing world, particularly China and India, the world's two most populous countries.

"China and India account for half of the projected increase in world energy use over the next 25 years," said Acting EIA Administrator Howard Gruenspecht "China alone, which only recently become the world's top energy consumer, is expected to use 68% more energy than the United States by 2035."

The economies of China and India were among those least affected by the worldwide recession. In 2008, China and India combined accounted for 21% of total world energy consumption. With strong economic growth in both countries over the projection period, their combined energy use more than doubles by 2035, when they account for 31% of world energy use in the IEO2011 Reference case.

Renewable energy is projected to be the fastest growing source of primary energy over the next 25 years, but fossil fuels remain the dominant source of energy. Renewable energy consumption increases by 2.8% per year and the renewable share of total energy use increases from 10% in 2008 to 15% in 2035 in the reference case.

Fossil fuels, however, continue to supply much of the energy used worldwide throughout the projection, and still account for 78% of world energy use in 2035. While the Reference case projections reflect current laws and policies as of the start of 2011, past experience suggests that renewable energy deployment is often significantly affected by policy changes.

Natural gas has the fastest growth rate among the fossil fuels over the 2008 to 2035 projection period. World natural gas consumption increases 1.6% per year, from 111 trillion cubic feet in 2008 to 169 trillion cubic feet in 2035. Unconventional natural gas (tight gas, shale gas, and coalbed methane) supplies increase substantially in the IEO2011 Reference case, especially from the United States, but also from Canada and China.

World oil prices remain high in the IEO2011 Reference case, but oil consumption continues to grow. Both conventional and unconventional liquid supplies are used to meet rising demand.

In the reference case the price of light sweet crude oil (in real 2009 dollars) remains high, reaching $125 per barrel in 2035. Total world petroleum and other liquids fuel use increases by 26.9 million barrels per day between 2008 and 2035, but the growth in conventional crude oil production is less than half this amount at 11.5 million barrels per day, while production of natural gas plant liquids increase by 5.1 million barrels per day.

The full report is available at: www.eia.gov

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