The virtual panel at Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week
The energy supply crunch in Europe, Asia and the US last year has underscored the need for smarter carbon-transition policy, said Majid Jafar, the CEO of Crescent Petroleum, the oldest private oil & gas firm in the Middle East.
To make lasting progress, carbon transition policy must be tailored to each country’s needs and dynamics while addressing the limitations of renewable energy like intermittency and lack of storage, he told industry and policy leaders gathered for a virtual panel at Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week.
Jafar highlighted that the price rises and energy shortages last year were the result of three simultaneous trends: low investment in oil and gas production and infrastructure, a rise in demand as economies recover from the pandemic, and the shutdown of some nuclear power sources.
He stressed that while renewables are part of the solution to reducing carbon emissions, the continuing importance of oil and gas in ensuring stable energy supply and in enabling the transition cannot be ignored.
“Solar and wind power are promising but cannot be stored, so stable energy sources like natural gas and nuclear power will be needed to complement them, as the UAE’s wise policy has demonstrated,” Jafar added.
In addition, there is a proven formula for cutting carbon emissions quickly that is easily applied today: reduce energy consumption by boosting efficiency, encourage reforestation, and switch from high-carbon-emitting fuels to lower-emitting ones.
These steps would bring rapid reductions in emissions and complement renewables in the transition to a more sustainable energy future.
“Any successful and sustainable policy must address the need for affordable and reliable energy in the developing world, where a billion people still don’t have electricity and 3 billion have no clean cooking solutions,” Jafar told attendees to the launch of the Atlantic Council Global Energy Agenda.
“What has become clear in recent months is that insufficient investment in oil and gas is leading to higher energy costs and more burning of coal worldwide, which both harms the economy and efforts to tackle climate change,” he added.
Jafar was joined on the panel by Mele Kiyari, Group Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation; Francisco La Camera, Director General of the International Renewable Energy Agency (Irena); Amb. Daniel Fried, former Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Distinguished Fellow at the Atlantic Council; and Helima Croft, Managing Director and Head of Global Commodity Strategy at RBC Capital Markets. The panel discussed the key issues facing energy markets in 2022.
The launch of the Global Energy Agenda was held in collaboration with Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week, which concluded on January 19. The speakers contributed essays to the Global Energy Agenda, which analyses the key issues and challenges facing the energy markets in 2022.
Crescent Petroleum became one of the first companies in the industry to achieve carbon neutrality across its operations in 2021 after completing a series of projects to reduce carbon intensity and offset remaining emissions.
The milestone was the culmination of years of effort to improve total process efficiencies and become one of the least carbon-intensive companies in the energy sector.-- TradeArabia News Service