Para Anggota Maling list Yth.,

Setelah sekian lama, barulah IEA keluar dengan laporan yang bernada
mendukung energi nuklir: sesudah perkebangan harga energi 2004 sampai
2006 dan setelah Pemerintah AS mendorong dibangunnya PLTN di AS.
Berikut ini kutipan press release IEA tentang World Energy Outlook
2006, yang secara hatu-hati mendukung nuklir sebagai penawar emisi
CO2.

Wasalam,


Press releases

(06)17

The World Energy Outlook 2006 Maps Out a Cleaner, Cleverer and More
Competitive Energy Future

See Related Publication or Event
07 November 2006 London --- "World political leaders have decided to
act with resolution and urgency to change the energy future. The
World Energy Outlook 2006 shows how to make that happen”, said Claude
Mandil, Executive Director of the International Energy Agency (IEA)
today in London at the launch of the latest edition of the Outlook –
the annual flagship publication of the IEA.

“WEO-2006 reveals that the energy future we are facing today, based
on projections of current trends, is dirty, insecure and expensive.
But it also shows how new government policies can create an
alternative energy future which is clean, clever and competitive –
the challenge posed to the IEA by the G8 leaders and IEA ministers”,
Mr. Mandil emphasised.

In a Reference Scenario, which provides a baseline vision of how
energy markets are likely to evolve without new government measures
to alter underlying energy trends, global primary energy demand
increases by 53% between now and 2030. Over 70% of this increase
comes from developing countries, led by China and India. Imports of
oil and gas in the OECD and developing Asia grow even faster than
demand. World oil demand reaches 116 mb/d in 2030, up from 84 mb/d in
2005. Most of the increase in oil supply is met by a small number of
major OPEC producers; non-OPEC conventional crude oil output peaks by
the middle of the next decade. Global carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions
reach 40 Gt in 2030, a 55% increase over today’s level. China
overtakes the United States as the world’s biggest emitter of CO2
before 2010. These trends would accentuate consuming countries’
vulnerability to a severe supply disruption and resulting price
shock. They would also amplify the magnitude of global climate
change.

Strong policy action is needed to move the world onto a more
sustainable energy path. An Alternative Policy Scenario demonstrates
that the energy future can be substantially improved if governments
around the world implement the policies and measures they are
currently considering. In this scenario, global energy demand is
reduced by 10% in 2030 – equivalent to China’s entire energy
consumption today. Global carbon-dioxide emissions are reduced by 16%
– equivalent to current emissions in the United States and Canada
combined – in the same time-frame. In the OECD countries, oil imports
and CO2 emissions peak by 2015 and then begin to fall. Improved
efficiency of energy use contributes most to the energy savings.
Increased use of nuclear power and renewables also help reduce
fossil-fuel demand and emissions. Just a dozen specific policies in
key countries account for 40% of the reduction in global CO2
emissions. The shifts in energy trends described in this scenario
would serve all three of the principal goals of energy policy:
greater security, more environmental protection and improved economic
efficiency.

“The good news”, said Mr. Mandil, “is that these policies are very
cost-effective. There are additional upfront costs involved, but they
are quickly outweighed by savings in fuel expenditures. And the extra
investment by consumers is less than the reduction in investment in
energy-supply infrastructure. Demand-side investments in more
efficient electrical goods are particularly economic; on average, an
additional $1 invested in more efficient electrical equipment and
appliances avoids more than $2 in investment in power generation,
transmission and distribution infrastructure.

The energy picture has changed appreciably since the 2004 Outlook,
the last major update of the IEA’s global energy projection. The
realities of the energy market have become harsher and the relative
competitive position of fuels has changed. Oil and gas prices this
year have been between three and four times higher than in 2002 and
this is reflected in a new oil price assumption for the projections.
But world economic growth has remained robust, as the recessionary
effects of higher energy prices have been more than offset by other
factors. Coal is now cheaper than natural gas for electricity
generation, while nuclear power may, in some cases, be cheaper than
both coal and gas – even where there is no penalty for emitting CO2.
Coal has led the recent surge in global energy demand and is on a
stronger growth path than in previous WEOs. China and India are the
predominant sources of global energy demand growth.

“WEO 2006 identifies under-investment in new energy supply as a real
risk”, said Mr. Mandil. To quench the world’s thirst for energy, the
Reference Scenario projections call a cumulative investment in
energy-supply infrastructure of over $20 trillion in real terms over
2005-2030 – substantially more than was previously estimated. Roughly
half of all the energy investment needed worldwide is in developing
countries. It is far from certain that all this investment will
actually occur. There has been an apparent surge in oil and gas
investment in recent years, but it is, to a large extent, illusory.
Drilling, material and personnel costs in the industry have soared,
so that in real terms investment in 2005 was barely higher than that
in 2000.

The Outlook demonstrates that nuclear power could make a major
contribution to reducing dependence on imported gas and curbing CO2
emissions in a cost-effective way. But this will happen only if the
governments of countries where nuclear power is accepted play a
stronger role in facilitating private investment, especially in
liberalised markets. “Nuclear power remains a potentially attractive
option for enhancing the security of electricity supply and
mitigating carbon-dioxide emissions – but financing the upfront
investment cost may remain a challenge”, Mr. Mandil underlined.

Biofuels can make a significant contribution to meeting future
road-transport energy needs, helping to promote energy diversity and
reducing emissions. Biofuels reach 4% of road-fuel use in the
Reference Scenario in 2030 and 7% in the Alternative Policy Scenario,
up from 1% today. The United States, the European Union and Brazil
account for the bulk of the global increase and remain the leading
producers and consumers of biofuels in both Scenarios. But rising
food demand, which competes with biofuels for existing arable and
pasture land, and the need for subsidy in many parts of the world,
will constrain the long-term potential for biofuels production using
current technology. New biofuels technologies being developed today,
notably ligno-cellulosic ethanol, could allow biofuels to play a much
bigger role – if major technological and commercial challenges can be
overcome.

The World Energy Outlook 2006 was produced by the IEA with input from
many distinguished international experts from government, industry
and academia. The annual Outlook publication has long been recognised
as the leading source of forward-looking global energy market
analysis and has received a number of awards from prestigious
organisations around the world.

Budi Sudarsono
Senior Member, Komite Nasional Indonesia, World Energy Council (KNI-WEC) or 
Indonesian National Committee, World Energy Council;
Ketua, Masyarakat Peduli Energi dan Lingkungan (MPEL) atau Energy and 
Environment Awareness Society; Sekretariat Tel. 62-021 75906564
Blog: http://feea.blogspot.com/
Website: http://www.geocities.com/budi_sudarsono/html
Res. 724 3291  Fax: 739 6189



 
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