![]() ![]() The NZE2050 includes the first detailed IEA modelling of what would be needed over the next ten years to put CO2 emissions on a pathway to net zero globally by 2050. The SDS requires that many advanced economies reach net-zero emissions by 2050 at the latest. The Net Zero Emissions by 2050 case (NZE2050) supplements the SDS analysis. The near-term detail is drawn from the recent International Energy Agency (IEA) Sustainable Recovery Plan, which boosts economies and employment while building cleaner and more resilient energy systems. The Sustainable Development Scenario (SDS) is based on the same economic and public health outlook as the STEPS, but it works backwards from shared long-term climate, clean air and energy access goals, examining what actions would be necessary to achieve those goals. In this scenario, a prolonged pandemic has deeper and longer lasting impacts on a range of economic, social and energy indicators than is the case in the STEPS the global economy in 2040 is almost 10% smaller than in the STEPS. The Delayed Recovery Scenario (DRS) retains the initial policy assumptions of the STEPS but takes a more pessimistic view on the health and economic outlook. Broad energy and climate objectives set out by countries, including net-zero targets for emissions, are incorporated in the STEPS to the extent that they are backed up by specific policies and measures. This scenario incorporates our assessment of all today’s policy ambitions and targets, including the energy components of announced stimulus and recovery packages and the Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement. The Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS) assumes that significant risks to public health are brought under control over the course of 2021, allowing for a steady recovery in economic activity. The crisis is meanwhile provoking changes in the strategic orientation of companies and investors, as well as in consumer behaviour. This slump in investment is likely to have major repercussions for energy markets in the coming years, even though the economic downturn is also putting downward pressure on demand. Capital investment in the energy sector is anticipated to fall by 18% in 2020, with the largest drop in spending on new oil and natural gas supply. Since the most carbon-intensive fuels, coal and oil, are bearing the brunt of this demand reduction, and renewables are least affected, CO2 emissions are set to fall by nearly 7%. ![]() Overall, we estimate that energy demand in 2020 is set to be 5% lower than in 2019. ![]() The usual long-term modelling horizons are maintained, but the focus is principally on the next ten years, exploring the impacts of the pandemic on the energy sector and the prospects for accelerated clean energy transitions. ![]() The special circumstances of 2020 require a special approach in this World Energy Outlook. The key questions include the duration of the pandemic, the shape of the recovery, and whether energy and sustainability are built into the strategies adopted by governments to kick-start their economies. The Covid-19 pandemic has introduced major new uncertainties for the energy sector and increased dramatically the range of pathways that it could follow. ![]()
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