Royal Dutch Shell Group .com

EurActiv.com (Belgium): Shell 2025 scenarios highlight vulnerability of the globalised world: Friday 13 January 2006

In Short:

Energy security and the lack of a European common energy policy were the main concerns raised at a debate about Royal Dutch Shell's Global Scenarios to 2025. Energy has moved high up the EU's external relations agenda according to Commissioner Piebalgs.

RELATED

Background:

Energy company Royal Dutch Shell presented its Global Scenarios to 2025 at an evening debate organised by Friends of Europe at the Bibliotheque Solvay in Brussels on 11 January 2006. Shell has been producing these scenarios for more than 30 years and has inspired other companies who need a long-term outlook for business decisions, to do the same. In his introduction Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer emphasised that his company does not use these scenarios as forecasts but as possible narratives about the future to gain insight into the global business environment for the next 20 years.

Issues:

Author of the scenarios, Albert Bressand, introduced the debate by pointing to the "dual crisis of security and trust" that has changed the world since 2001. The 9/11 terrorist attacks, the instability in the Middle East, issues of energy security and the collapse of failed states have led to a security crisis. The bursting of the internet bubble and several corporate scandals (Enron, Parmalat) have created a new wave of distrust in the market. The state has responded to this dual crisis by taking on a new role of coercion and regulation to restore security and trust.

The Shell report identifies three key drivers of world development:

  • market incentives (efficiency)
  • the force of community (social cohesion and justice)
  • coercion and regulation by the state (security)

Based on the interplay and trade-offs between these drivers, the report identifies three possible future worlds (the 'Trilemma Triangle'):

  • "low trust globalisation":  more globalisation and market liberalisation but also more coercive states and regulators; trust problem not resolved
  • "open doors":  heightened globalisation and more cohesive civil societies crisis of trust and security has been resolved; use of the precautionary principle, use of more soft power
  • "flags":  states rally around the flag, trust fragmented, national societies split into diverse groups; efficiency and the market take a backseat to security and solidarity, more protectionism

These three scenarios were also used to calculate possible average growth rates for each. The "Open Doors" economy would have the highest growth (3.8%), "Low Trust Globalisation would lead to 3.1% growth and "Flags" would be seriously lower (2.6%).

The report looks at the implications of the three scenarios for the US, China and the European Union. The European Union would fare best in the "Open Doors" ('Schengen Plus'). In the "low trust globalisation" scenario, Bressand sees an "acrimonious reassessment" of the EU with à la carte Europe, and the "Flags" world would lead to 25 states on diverging courses.

The energy chapter of the Scenarios 2025 report is particularly interesting. 2004 has been an "energy watershed", according to the report. "The energy sector appears to have entered a new era, as renewed worries are increasingly expressed about the long-term balance between energy demand and supply". Three major discontinuities have led to this deeper structural change:

  • the relinking of global economic growth and energy consumption  (the decreasing trend of energy growth and GDP growth has been reversed)
  • uncertainties over reserves and energy security:  the report is surprisingly open about the seriousness of the "peak oil debate" ("the increased risk of reaching a peak in oil supplies in the relatively near future has been debated for decades. However, the failure of previous warnings to materialise is no reason to dismiss the new ones") 
  • the emergence of carbon as a commodity, related to the climate change issue which gets a lot of attention in the report

Positions:

During the debate, former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt emphasised the new energy insecurity. Joking that God must have been in a bad mood when He allocated energy sources, Bildt highlighted the danger of most of the current energy reserves being in geopolitically sensitive regions such as the Middle East and Russia. 

Polish historian and MEP Bronislaw Geremek warned against Russia's ambitions to revive its global power position by using its energy wealth. He also demanded more thinking about the future of democracy. "In 2025, the biggest economy in the world could well be China, a non-democratic state," Geremek said. The Polish former foreign minister also challenged Commissioner Piebalgs.  "The Commission has been unable to formulate an energy security policy, in terms of security of dependence".

Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs defended the EU's renewed attention towards a common energy policy. "Energy has moved high up the EU's external relations agenda", Piebalgs stated. He also pointed to the different dialogues that have been set up with energy producers to secure stable relations.

Carl Bildt reacted to the commissioner by saying that the EU "has been living in a fool's paradise for too long" concerning energy policy. He also underlined the danger of increasing competition between nation states for dwindling energy resources.

Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer  addressed the need to develop "green fossil fuels", using the example of the use of "green coal" with CO2 storage.

Other EU leaders have also been pushing recently for a stronger and more unified European energy policy as a result of high oil prices and the geopolitical challenges of energy policy (Ukraine-Russia 'gas war'). In a recent interview with Der Spiegel, new German Chancellor Angela Merkel said: "It has become clear to us [...] how what is really an economic issue, namely the purchase and delivery of gas, is deeply political".

Latest & next steps:

  • The Commission is preparing a new Green Paper on European energy policy
  • EU leaders are expected to discuss the issue of a common European energy policy at their Spring Summit meeting in March

Links

Related Documents

 
Tools
Systran rough translation
E-mail to a friend

Click here to return to ShellNews.net HOME PAGE
 

Click here to return to Royal Dutch Shell Group .com