If All Vehicles Go Electric, That’s Just Step One
(Bloomberg
Opinion) -- Many of the headlines coming out of Detroit this week
during the North American International Auto Show will be about electric
vehicles – from new electric concept vehicles from Nissan and Infiniti
to an emerging partnership between Ford and VW on electric and
autonomous vehicles. By all means, environmentalists and others should
celebrate progress in bringing more EVs to market. But they should not
assume such progress absolves the world from working hard on other
fronts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. When I speak about energy, I
find too many people in my audiences putting far too much hope in the
lone measure of phasing out petro-powered cars.
There’s
a particular psychological phenomenon at work here: All humans tend to
focus on one or two solutions to incredibly complex problems. Robert
Jervis, a political science professor at Columbia University, writes
about how the brain can account for only a limited number of factors in
considering any particular phenomenon. As a result, each of us tends to
fixate on a small number of facets, and to give priority to the ones we
understand.
So
it makes sense that so many people have a tendency to focus intensely
on electric cars as the antidote to climate change. Unlike many other
technologies that could prove significant – such as cleaner energy
production from fusion, or carbon capture and storage to reduce existing
greenhouse gas – even the nonscientists among us instantly grasp the
idea of driving a car powered without oil. Moreover, the intuition is
correct in many ways: In the U.S., as in many other countries, the
transportation sector generates more greenhouse gas emissions than any
other sector. And over 90 percent of the fuel used in transportation is
petroleum based. It therefore seems – and is – logical that if we can
wean our own cars and trucks off of oil, our climate prospects will be
dramatically improved.
There
are, of course, some important details. The first is that much of the
reduction in carbon emissions in an EV-friendly scenario comes about not
just from the switch from running vehicles on oil to electricity. It
also results from decarbonizing the electricity grid – moving away from
coal and natural gas to alternative forms of energy such as nuclear,
solar and wind to generate electricity. Right now, more than a quarter
of U.S. emissions come from the electricity sector. The advent of EVs
and grid decarbonization must come together for maximum impact on carbon
emissions. EVs running on electricity produced from coal is hardly a
step in the right direction.
This
fact is explained in a recent report produced by the International
Energy Agency called Global EV Outlook. When comparing scenarios with
different EV adoption rates and grid decarbonization standards, it finds
that, at a global level, moving the grid to low-carbon energy sources
can more than double the emissions reductions that come from the simple
electrification of road transport.
That
reality does not seem like too much a splash of cold water for the EV
advocates. After all, it is in the power sector that renewables are
making the most progress. Renewables are now the fastest-growing energy
source; according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, nearly
two-thirds of the capacity added in the U.S. power sector for 2019 will
be from wind and solar. But we can’t be complacent. The uncomfortable
fact is that while renewables are meeting much of the growth in global
demand for electricity and the share of coal in electricity generation
has declined, the absolute amount of coal consumed in the world has
remained virtually constant.
It
is, however, only when we dig deeper into the numbers that we realize
the importance of guarding against that all-so-human tendency to fixate
on electric vehicles and see them as the Holy Grail of mitigating
climate change.
In
many ways, the global growth of EVs on the road from one million in
2015 to two million in 2017 to over three million in 2018 is impressive,
even in the context of approximately 1.3 billion vehicles in the world.
However, even some of the most ambitious projections for global EV
market penetration suggest it will be decades before EVs account for
even half the market. In a scenario that the IEA identifies as ambitious
and dependent on many policy and technological advances, the stock of
electric vehicles only reaches 228 million by 2030, a number the agency
expects will amount a 30 percent market share. Bloomberg NEF, formerly
New Energy Finance, forecasts that by 2040, there will be “559 million
EVs on the road” and “55% of all new car sales and 33% of the global
fleet will be electric.” Again, having two-thirds of the cars on the
road be guzzling gasoline in 21 years does not sound like adequate
progress – even if we acknowledge that the uptake of EVs will continue
beyond these dates.
But
let’s be real optimists and assume that many of the obstacles to more
rapid EV penetration – such as infrastructure – are overcome more
quickly than even those ambitious scenarios project. Let’s imagine that
all the world’s cars and trucks become completely electric in the coming
decades. And our electricity grids go completely carbon free. Surely
our climate problems would be solved?
Not
quite. Even if all passenger transport and road freight were
electrified, approximately half of the world’s consumption of oil would
remain untouched. Some of this remaining oil use would fuel aviation and
shipping, but nearly a third would feed the global petrochemicals
sector. That sector is booming, churning out more plastics, fertilizers,
tires, detergents, medical equipment and clothing than ever before.
Petrochemicals are the third-largest industrial emitter of greenhouse
gases.
The
growth in petrochemicals is quietly poised to continue. Last autumn,
the IEA released another report, this one offers a variety of scenarios,
including its reference one, in which plastics become more central to
oil demand growth than road passenger transport by 2050. Fatih Birol,
the executive director of the agency, was blunt: “When we look at the
years to come, the petrochemical sector is by far the largest driver of
global oil demand growth, much higher than cars, much higher than
trucks, aviation, and shipping.” As would follow, the report predicted
that carbon emissions from the petrochemicals sector – led by growth in
the production of plastics – would increase by 20 percent by 2030 and 30
percent by 2050.
After
2018 delivered so much sobering news about climate change, we should be
entitled to applaud the advance of technology that will be on display
in Detroit this week. At the same time, we need to be conscious of our
human tendency to focus on one or two factors when tackling a complex
problem like climate change. We cannot hope or assume that the march of
progress in electric vehicles (even it if exceeds the most optimistic
projections) will be sufficient to bend the emissions curve alone. As so
many of the recent climate reports have underscored, the world will
need progress on many dimensions to successfully tackle the climate
challenge at hand.
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