Halliburton, Baker Hughes merge; Keystone XL returns; US, China go green [Recharge]
Loading...
From Halliburton's big deal with Baker Hughes to US-China climate accords, each weekend Recharge examines the big ideas in global energy. .
Oil's future:听, prompting pared-back investments in shale and a merger between oil-field giants Halliburton and Baker Hughes. But oil is unlikely to stay cheap forever. The International Energy Agency's latest outlook suggests听, with demand for oil expected to increase 37 percent by 2040.
XL: Debate over the Keystone XL pipeline resurfaced as the US Congress began its lame duck session Wednesday. Sen. Landrieu (D) of Louisiana 鈥 鈥 pushed the Senate for a vote on the long-delayed pipeline. Minutes later, Rep. Cassidy (R) 鈥 her runoff opponent 鈥 introduced identical legislation in the House. The .
Breakthrough: China and the US at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit. The deal bolsters US emissions cuts, and commits China to reaching peak emissions by听2030. Some , while . Still, any agreement between the world's two biggest emitters is a breakthrough, and could build momentum ahead of 2015 climate talks in Paris.
In the pipeline
- Saturday, Nov. 15 and Sunday, Nov. 16 : BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA 鈥 At this weekend's G20 summit President Obama will announce a . Obama's pledge aims to lay the groundwork for an international deal on emissions reductions in Paris next year. But the GOP Congress retains the power of the purse, and is certain to push back against Obama.
- Tuesday, Nov. 18 to Friday, Nov. 21: VIENNA, AUSTRIA 鈥 Major world powers are working to broker an ahead of a self-imposed Nov. 24 deadline. , it could mean sharper sanctions on Iran, and possible increases in oil prices.
- Tuesday, Nov. 18: WASHINGTON, D.C. 鈥 The House passed Rep. Cassidy's Keystone XL bill Friday, and the . At last count, it appeared Landrieu was one vote short of a 60-vote, filibuster-proof majority 鈥 though she said in a floor speech she was confident she could rally 60 votes to pass it.
听
Drill deeper
[Al-Jazeera]
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has kept climate change off the formal agenda at the G20 summit his nation is hosting this weekend. It's partly because Australia is the world's second-largest exporter of carbon-heavy coal, and caps on carbon emissions threaten to stifle its mining industry. Abbott has scrapped Australia's carbon trading scheme and defunded renewable energy programs.
[San Francisco Chronicle]
鈥淸The US-China climate agreement] of course is all long term, but even if these agreements are weak on the details, they鈥檙e incredibly important to industries like solar," says Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the California Solar Energy Industries Association. "They give investors and consumers confidence in the industries鈥 future."
[Scientific American]
Leaders of the world's heaviest polluters have agreed to scale back emissions, and Scientific American takes a look at the nitty-gritty of the deal 鈥 from the rate at which each country is looking to reduce emissions, to how big an impact it'll have on the climate. China and the US together account for 40 percent of greenhouse gases, so reductions from both have the potential to move the needle on global warming.
Energy sources
- : "The short-term picture of a well-supplied oil market should not disguise the challenges that lie ahead as reliance grows on a relatively small number of producers. Regional oil demand trends are quite distinct: for each barrel of oil no longer used in OECD countries, two barrels more are used in the non-OECD. Increased oil use ... drives demand higher, from 90 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2013 to 104 mb/d in 2040 ..."
- : "BP鈥檚 motion [to reconsider a ruling that found BP "grossly negligent" in the Deepwater Horizon spill] represents a belated attempt to exclude testimony elicited in part by its own cross-examination ... BP鈥檚 Motion to Amend the Findings, Alter or Amend the Judgment, or for a New Trial ... is DENIED."
- : "Brent crude oil spot prices averaged $87/bbl in October, the first month Brent prices have averaged below $90/bbl since November 2010. EIA projects that Brent crude oil prices will average $83/bbl in 2015, $18/bbl lower than forecast in last month's STEO [Short Term Energy Outlook]."
From Keystone XL to Halliburton to international climate talks, Recharge delivers global energy's big ideas to your inbox each Saturday.听.