making energy great again
TRANSCRIPT
Making Energy Great Again
Presentation to the G-20 LeadershipFebruary 27, 2016
2 by 2100? It’s happening!℃
Climate Change Vision
Key Policy ComponentsSector Levers Baseline Results
Population and Consumption
Population (Scenario)GDP/capita growth rate (%)
23%
2 (11 bil people by year 2100)2.4%
Agriculture and Land Use
Reduction in CO2 emissions from Land Use and Forestry (%) Reduction in other gas emissions (%)
0%
0%
0%
72%
Fossil FuelTax (-) /Subsidy (+)
Coal ($0/GJ)Oil ($0/GJ)Gas ($0/GJ)Natural Gas Methane Leakage (%)
$0$0$03%
$-6$-8$-41%
Sustainable EnergyTax (-) /Subsidy (+)
Renewable ($0/GJ)Nuclear ($0/GJ)Biomass ($0/GJ)New Tech ($0/GJ)
$0$0$0$0
$8$2$5$7
Energy Efficiency Stationary (%/year)Mobile (%/year)
1.0%1.0%
3.5%2.5%
Carbon Price Carbon Price ($/Ton CO2)Revenue distribution (%):Fossil FuelSustainablePublic
$0 0%0%0%
$100 10%80%10%
● Carbon Pricing ◦ Uniformity across
sectors & countries◦ Apparent
environmental cost ◦ Markets collaborate
to reduce emissions● Fossil Fuels
◦ Taxes offset by subsidies
◦ Jobs created for Research & Development
Projected Long-Term Outcomes
● Sustainable Energy ◦ Job growth with
expansion of new industry ◦Ability to use pre-existing
energy sources● Energy Efficiency
◦Reduced energy costs for private & public consumption
◦ Increased corporate social responsibility
◦ Improved global infrastructure
Change in Energy Share by Source thru 2100
●Trade-Offs●Economic Thresholds●Multi-Faceted Energy
Efficiency●Shared Missions
Reduction
How the Policy Package works
Energy Demand
● Climate NGOs ● Technology Companies ● General Public ● UN● Government organizations
Supporting Stakeholders
Implementation Timeline