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2
Introduction
The first five years of the 21st century have brought a great deal of turmoil and
instability to the global oil market. In November 2001, oil prices stood at under
$20 a barrel. By April 2006, they crossed the $75 mark. Many reasons brought to
the steep rise in oil prices among them growing demand in developing Asia, the
collapse of major Russian oil company Yukos, lack of sufficient investment,
terrorism and political instability in several oil producing countries, fear of military
confrontation with Iran and increased hurricane activity in the U.S. This sudden
rise in oil prices has already taken a toll on the global economy. The International
Monetary Fund suggests that the recent oil price increases were the primary
factor behind the decline of global GDP growth by 0.7–0.8 percentage points in
2005–06 relative to 2004. While oil prices impact global economy at large they
impose a particular burden on energy intensive industries like the transportation
and petrochemical industries. The big question is whether the oil market is
suffering a temporary disruption or whether we are at the outset of a new era in
which oil output is nearing its peak and will no longer be sufficient to meet global
demand. Are we in a midst of a spike or are we on the brink of a new plateau?
Pessimists argue there's simply not enough oil to meet the booming demands
coming from developing countries like China and India and still satisfy the
voracious appetites of traditional consumers in the industrialized world. Such
voices also come from within the petroleum industry. Venezuela's energy
minister Rafael Ramirez remarked in 2004 that "the history of cheap oil may have
ended." Around the same time, Chevron’s CEO admitted that “the era of easy oil
is over.”1 Governmental and multinational organizations tasked with projecting
energy prices are also showing signs of pessimism. In its World Energy Outlook
through 2030 the International Energy Agency, raised its long-term forecast for
oil prices by as much as one-third and painted a pessimistic picture of the future
economy if the industrialized world does not begin to wean itself off oil.2 The
Energy Information Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy came to
similar conclusions. It projects that oil prices will remain well above $50 a barrel
for the next 25 years. This is a sharp shift from its 2005 projection that real oil
prices will decline to $31 a barrel by 2025. The reason for the shift is a growing
realization that OPEC oil producers are not likely to pump as much as oil as
previously projected to meet growing demand. There are those who see an even
bleaker future. Goldman Sachs Group predicts that the decline in supply of
cheap oil will bring crude prices to $105 a barrel by the end of the decade.3
Some analysts such as Matthew Simmons, former energy advisor to President
George W. Bush, predict oil prices of between $200 and $250 a barrel in the
coming years.4 Optimists, on the other hand, point out that some experts have
been predicting a scarcity of oil for nearly a century -- and yet the oil keeps
1
Chevron Corporation website, http://www.willyoujoinus.com/downloads/manifesto.pdf
2
International Energy Agency, World Energy Outlook 2005.
3
“Goldman's Murti Says `Peak Oil' Risks Sending Prices Above $105,” Bloomberg, December
19, 2005.
4
“Olpreis kann auf 200 bis 250 Dollar steigen,” Capital, January 5, 2006.
coming. They hold that the combination of today's high oil prices and improved
extraction techniques means that the break-even point for exploiting harder to
extract oil is getting ever closer. Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi and
Exxon Mobil Corp. President Rex Tillerson say oil supplies will last for decades
and significant decline in prices is projected. In its June 2005 study, Cambridge
Energy Research Associates (CERA) projected that significant oil supply
capacity of as much as 16 million barrels per day (mbd) will be coming on stream
by the end of the decade. The report also projects that unconventional oil will
play a much larger role in the growth of supply than is currently believed,
reaching almost 35% of supply.5 Optimist assume that all this anticipated extra
supply will drive oil prices back to the mid-$30s.
It is difficult to determine who is right. Forecasting future oil prices has always
been a tough challenge. The reason is that most of the world’s oil reserves are
concentrated in the hands of governments which provide very little access to
their field by field reserve data and, even worse, resist privatization of their oil
industry and foreign investment in their countries. We are also unable to predict
with certainty what will be the impact of geological depletion on the oil market
and how far we are from peak oil, the point in which half of the world’s cheaply
recoverable oil has been depleted and from where price never goes down.
One thing both pessimists and optimists agree on is that the coming years will
bring significant price instability, stemming from the fact that the market lacks
sufficient liquidity. Until 2003 the global oil market enjoyed a large amount of
spare production capacity: the ability of some producers, primarily Saudi Arabia,
to inject extra oil into the market in the event of supply disruption. Due to growth
in demand in developing Asia this spare capacity has been eroded from about
5.5mbd in 2002 to less than one million barrels per day today. Little spare
capacity means the full burden of sudden shortages or supply disruptions is
reflected in current spot prices. Every drop in production can cause a sharp price
spike. Insufficient spare capacity also creates a premium of its own for the
forward barrel, based on concerns with what could happen in an event of a
disruption. Since no major oil producing nation is likely to invest billions of dollars
in equipment that lies idle most of the time lack of spare production capacity will
continue to haunt the market for many years to come.
6.0
Million Barrels per Day
5.0
4.0 Spare production
3.0 capacity is declining
2.0
1.0
0.0
1991- 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
1997
Average
5
Worldwide Liquids Capacity Outlook to 2010 – Tight Supply or Excess of Riches, Cambridge
Energy Research Associates, June 2005.
4
No doubt increasing oil prices are likely to dampen global trade. By value, 40
percent of goods traded internationally are transported as air cargo; cargo traffic
is a leading indicator of any economic slowdown. The air cargo industry itself, in
which fuel accounts for 20-30% of the operational cost, is poised to be the prime
casualty of the new era of expensive oil. Jet fuel prices have almost tripled in the
past four years. As a result, the world’s airlines and cargo carriers spent over
$100 billion on fuel in 2005, a 50% increase over 2004, according to the IATA.6
At reasonable oil prices of $30-$40 a barrel, world air cargo traffic was projected
to expand at an average annual rate of 6.2% for the next two decades, tripling
over current traffic levels.7 But the recent spike in oil prices is taking the air cargo
industry into uncharted territory, raising questions about the economic viability of
many players in the industry. Skyrocketing fuel prices have already brought
airlines to suspend flights and discontinue services. Some carriers like United
Airlines, Delta and Northwest, have declared bankruptcy.
This paper will attempt to provide the medium- and long-term outlook for the oil
market, and to present the relevant risk factors on the demand and supply sides.
It will discuss the potential policy and technological solutions consumers can
adopt to reduce their vulnerability to price shocks and declining supply. Finally, it
will discuss the potential pathways available to the air cargo industry in order for
it to maintain its financial viability in the face of oil market volatility.
The main consumers of oil will continue to be the advanced economies; the U.S.,
OECD Europe, and Japan together consume about half of global annual oil
output. But during the course of the coming two decades, the developing Asian
countries are projected to grow at a rate several times faster than those of the
industrialized world. China’s GDP growth is expected to grow at nearly 6% per
year, compared with 1.7% for Japan, 2.2% for Europe, and 2.9% for North
America.8 When it comes to oil, rapid economic growth in China and India,
together a third of humanity, has caused in recent years what can be viewed as a
demand shock. China’s automobile market demonstrates the degree of the
challenge humanity is facing. In 1994, there were 9.4 million vehicles on the road
in China. In 2004, there were 28 million vehicles. In 2020, the Chinese
government predicts, there will be 140 million. Barring a policy shift, most of
these cars will operate primarily on petroleum products. As a result of its growth,
China became in 1993 a net oil importer and since then its oil consumption has
6
“European, Asian Carriers Cope Better With Soaring Fuel Costs,” Aviation Week & Space
Technology, October 9, 2005.
7
Boeing, World Air Cargo Forecast 2004/2005.
8
World Economic Outlook, International Monetary Fund, April 2005.
5
grown by leaps and bounds. China recently surpassed Japan as the No. 2 oil
consumer behind the U.S. Its demand for oil is projected to grow at a rate of
500,000 barrels per year in comparison to U.S. demand growth of approximately
200,000 barrels per year. Altogether, according to the reference case of the
International Energy Outlook 2005 of the U.S. Department of Energy, world
demand for crude oil will grow from 85 million barrels per day today to 103 million
barrels per day in 2015 and to just over 119 million barrels per day in 2025. But
oil demand will be mostly a factor of price. Though demand in recent years has
been fairly unresponsive to price changes—a 10 percent a barrel increase in
prices reduces demand by only about 1 percent—large price changes, such as
the ones experienced in the 1970s, could have substantial impact on it. Such
spikes could trigger a significant adjustment of technology and oil consumption,
bringing governments to introduce price controls and other austerity measures. If
such disruptions occur, growth in demand could be dampened to 91 mbd by
2015 and 103 mbd by 2025.9 Demand for oil could also be affected by
unexpected catastrophes like natural disasters or an outbreak of flu pandemic.
Such events could slow global economic activity, bringing to a sharp downturn in
demand for oil.
Constrained supply
The projected increase in world oil demand would require in the next 25 years an
increment to world production capability of close to 40 mbd relative to today’s
level. This figure only represents the net addition. The gross addition will have to
be far higher as it includes the need to replace depleted oil which today stands
on 5%. To meet 2010 requirements of some 94 mbd entails a net new capacity of
8mbd plus replaced depletion of 22mbd. This adds up to a total of 30mbd of new
oil not currently available, equivalent to the total amount of oil currently produced
by OPEC. Will the industry be able to ramp up production to such level? In 2005
rapid depletion in North Sea, slowdown in Russia’s production, delays in the
Caspian, hurricanes in Gulf of Mexico led to a total of net new additions of under
300,000 barrels. If one is to judge by last year’s performance the answer is likely
to be negative.
All this begs for a rapid increase in new supply. In the past decade non-OPEC
suppliers, despite the fact they account for under a third of the world total
9
International Energy Outlook 2005.
6
reserves, provided additional supply far above their relative share. They were
able to do so primarily because they pump at an unregulated pace and are not
subject to production quotas. But it is not clear whether non-OPEC production is
sustainable. Exploration, development, and production costs in non-OPEC
countries are much higher than in OPEC countries and the reserve-to-production
ratio -- an indicator of how long proven reserves would last at current production
rates -- is far smaller than OPEC’s. Exxon Mobil Corporation has estimated that
non-OPEC production--this includes Russia and West Africa--will peak within a
decade.10 At that point, there will be little easily recoverable oil left outside of the
Middle East. This means that over the next two decades the call on OPEC will be
significant, requiring that it more than double its output. It is very unlikely that
OPEC members would be able to step to the plate with such huge quantities of
oil. The Saudis claim they could raise output from 9.5mbd today to 12.5mbd by
2009 and to this end they are planning to increase the number of their drilling rigs
from 55 in 2004 to 110 in 2006 but it is not clear how successful they will be in
sustaining such level of production.
Iraq, OPEC’s second largest reserve, remains a wild card. Prior to the U.S.
invasion it was believed that the country could quickly ramp up production and
exceed its pre-1990 war level of 3.5mbd by 2004. But due to a sustained
campaign of sabotage Iraqi production has actually declined to 2.1mbd and oil
companies are reluctant to invest in the country. Unless security is restored the
10
Exxon president predicts non-OPEC peak in 10 years, Oil and Gas Journal, Dec 13, 2004.
7
country is not likely to become a major producer. The future of Iran, OPEC’s third
largest reserve, is also in question. The country’s aspirations to develop nuclear
weapons could soon put it under international sanctions which would, in turn
affect its oil production and the ability of international oil companies to invest
there. Another important OPEC member, Nigeria, has become increasingly
volatile in recent years and oil companies are reluctant to take the risks it
presents. In February 2006, rebels who want greater control of the oil wealth
produced on their land declared a “total war” against all foreign oil interests in the
Niger Delta.
Three major factors will determine whether OPEC and non OPEC
countries will have the ability to satisfy the world’s thirst for oil in the
coming years.
Low oil prices in the 1980s and 1990s brought to underinvestment in the oil
industry and over reliance on the surplus capacity that was created in the 1970s.
Now with strong demand, governments, national oil companies as well as
international oil and gas companies all face the challenge of formulating and
implementing viable investment programs to replace depleted reserves and
develop their upstream sector. There is also an immediate need for new pipeline
infrastructure and more tankers to transport crude to the world markets and an
even more urgent need for increased refining capacity to convert crude into
various petroleum products. Shortages of skilled workers and providers of oil
services also pose a problem.
More troubling is the fact that OPEC producers present significant political
hurdles, tight restrictions and other legal constraints to foreign investors. As a
result, little investment is made in the places where most of the reserves are
concentrated. For example, only 5% of ExxonMobil’s investments 2001-2005
were in the Middle East, home of two thirds of the world’s oil reserves. In major
oil producing countries like Iraq, Iran, and until recently Libya, it was sanctions
that have kept international oil companies from investing. The Russian
government's break-up of Yukos has raised the risk of expropriation for foreign
companies operating in that country. Such limitations have caused delays in the
development of these countries’ petroleum industry which could create acute
shortages in the future. It takes about 8-10 years from the beginning of a drilling
prospect until the oil reaches a pipeline from which it can move into the world
market. This means that every delay in the development of new fields will
translate into higher oil prices.
According to the IEA, if producers in the Middle East and North Africa do not
immediately increase investment substantially, the average price of crude oil
imported by IEA members would be unlikely to fall at all by 2010 from current
high levels, and would rise to an assumed price of $86 a barrel in nominal terms
by 2030. On the other hand, if these regions begin investing, prices could
8
average $65 a barrel in 2030. To meet rising world demand, oil and gas
producers need to raise their average annual investment to $200 billion from now
until 2030. Middle East producers currently invest about $15 billion annually.
It is a sad fact that most of the oil producing countries suffer from social and
economic illnesses which make them particularly prone to conflict and political
instability. Rapid populations growth, “youth bulges,” unemployment, democracy
deficit and failure of regimes to diversify their economies have created severe
strain in important oil producing countries like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq and
Nigeria. These strains are likely to deepen over time, creating an inhospitable
investment climate in these countries. In addition, oil companies face growing
security risks as they move into more unstable parts of the world in search of
new oil reserves. In many oil producing countries oil companies also face terrorist
threats and a growing number of politically motivated attacks against energy
installations and employees. In places like Iraq, Sudan, Iran, Russia, Nigeria,
Colombia, and Venezuela terrorist groups and other rogue elements kidnap oil
employees and target pipelines, refineries, and pumping stations to prevent local
governments from generating oil revenues. Pipelines are very easily sabotaged.
A simple explosive device can take a critical section of pipeline out of operation
for weeks. This is why pipeline sabotage has become the weapon of choice of
the insurgents in Iraq where 300 attacks took place in the past three years.
The sabotage campaign against the world’s vulnerable pipelines has already
brought to a cumulative loss of over one million barrels per day and is likely to
continue to spread to new territories. Such assaults on oil infrastructure have
added a “fear premium” of $10-$15 per barrel of oil. Governments, oil companies
and pipeline operators are seeking to deploy new technologies to reduce the
impact of the scourge and in some cases to increase the presence of private
security companies, many employing former soldiers from western countries, to
protect oil production in places where local security forces are seen as
inadequate. But such solutions add extra cost to the price of each barrel which is
in turn passed on to the consumer.
3. Geological depletion
The degree of geological depletion is a matter of fierce dispute in the oil industry.
Almost everyone agrees that crude oil supply cannot continue to grow endlessly
and that production is about to peak sometime in the first half of the 21st Century.
What no one knows is when exactly this will happen. Pessimists predict peak oil
by 2010. Optimists say it will not come for 30 to 40 years. Most experts expect
peak to occur in 10 to 20 years. Predictions about oil depletion have been made
since oil was first discovered. In 1874 a Pennsylvania geologist predicted that the
U.S. has enough petroleum to keep its kerosene lamps burning for only four
years. But recently serious concerns are being increasingly voiced by analysts
that the world petroleum production is closer to peak than expected and supply of
9
conventional crude will begin to decline causing chronic shortages.11 In fact,
conventional oil production has already peaked and is declining. For every 10
barrels of conventional oil consumed only four new barrels are discovered.12
Since the mid-1980s there has been a growing gap between annual world oil
reserve additions and annual consumption. One of the main reasons discoveries
have fallen is because exploration has shifted to less prospective regions. For
example: in the past decade, 64% of the exploration wells drilled around the
world took place in North America, where only 12% of the world’s undiscovered
oil and gas resources are concentrated. At the same time only 7% of the
exploration took place in the Middle East, home to 28% of the undiscovered
reserves.13 Nevertheless, there are growing signs that even the more promising
regions might be facing the onset of decline in production. Discoveries in the
most important of the non-OPEC exporters, Russia, have reached a plateau. In
November 2005 Kuwait Oil Company revealed that Kuwait’s largest oilfield
Burgan, the second largest oilfield in the world, has reached its peak production
at 1.7mbd. In Saudi Arabia, no giant field has been found in 30 years and the
probability of making new very large discoveries decreases as a producing area
matures. The Saudis have estimated they have 150billion barrels beyond the 260
billions which are already proven.14 But various reports, including those by the
US National Intelligence Council and Matthew Simmons’, question Saudi
Arabia’s claims that it can significantly expand capacity.15
16
Estimated World Oil Resources (Billion Barrels)
Proved
Region Reserves Reserve Growth Undiscovered Total
Mature Market Economies
United States 21.9 76.0 83.0 180.9
Canada 178.8 12.5 32.6 223.9
Mexico 14.6 25.6 45.8 86.0
Western Europe 15.8 19.3 34.6 69.7
Japan 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.5
Australia/New Zealand 1.5 2.7 5.9 10.1
Transitional Economies
Former Soviet Union 77.8 137.7 170.8 386.3
Eastern Europe 1.5 1.5 1.4 4.4
Emerging Economies
China 18.3 19.6 14.6 52.5
India 5.4 3.8 6.8 16.0
Other Emerging Asia 11.0 14.6 23.9 49.5
Middle East 729.6 252.5 269.2 1,251.3
Africa 100.8 73.5 124.7 299.0
Central and South America 100.6 90.8 125.3 316.7
Total World 1,277.7 730.2 938.9 2,946.8
OPEC 885.2 395.6 400.5 1,681.3
Non-OPEC 392.5 334.6 538.4 1,265.5
11
Robert L. Hirsch, Roger Bezdek and Robert Wendling, Peaking of World Oil Production:
Impacts, Mitigation and Risk Management, February, 2005.
12
Washington Post, June 6, 2004.
13
International Energy Agency, World Energy Outlook 2004.
14
“Saudi Arabia: A Whole New Drill,” BusinessWeek, October 10, 2005.
15
“Doubts Raised on Saudi Vow for More Oil,” New York Times, October 27, 2005.
16
International Energy Outlook, 2005
10
Scenarios for the coming decade
Recoverable
Supply
Resources
Oil Prices
Conflict Seasonality
The following table presents three scenarios for oil prices in the coming decade.
Oil prices will continue to be impacted by the aggregate sum of a wide variety of
factors affecting supply and demand. Each one of the factors will influence oil
prices to a certain degree, some for the better, others for the worse. The column
titled ”best case” enumerates the positive developments which could take place
in the oil market, driving prices down. The “worst case” scenario describes
everything that can go wrong: increasing conflicts, wars and oil producing
countries collapsing into failed states. The “business as usual” scenario assumes
that global dynamics of change continue without great surprises or drastic
changes in oil supply and demand patterns. Naturally, in the real world not
everything that could go wrong does go wrong and vice versa. Positive and
negative developments offset each other’s influence. However, when several
negative developments take place simultaneously they can create a perfect
storm with significant impact on the market.
11
BEST CASE Business as usual WORST CASE
In today’s tight oil market any supply disruption could be potentially damaging
and in the absence of spare capacity the likelihood of price hikes is higher than
ever. There are multiple factors that can bring about such market dislocations at
any given moment. The result is a remarkable state of inherent instability that is
not likely to improve in the foreseeable future. The combination of lack of
liquidity, natural disasters political instability and inhospitable investment climate
in major oil producing countries makes the return to the old world of cheap oil in
the $30-$40 range a remote outcome and could drive oil prices to a level not
seen before.
17
International Trade Statistics 2005, World Trade Organization.
15
resilience can only hold to a certain extent. Developing and transition economies,
particularly heavily indebted poor countries, are likely to suffer the most from
rising oil prices as their economies are more oil-intensive and less able to
weather the financial turmoil wrought by higher oil-import costs. According to the
IMF, a $5 increase in the price of oil shaves off about 1% of GDP.18 Such an
increase would worsen the current account deficits of those countries, limit their
access to international capital markets and bring about a transfer of wealth from
consumers to producers.
Conservation
18
International Monetary Fund, The Impact of Higher Oil Prices on the Global Economy,
December 2000.
16
Enhanced recovery technologies
Very often one hears the argument that the depletion of conventional oil supply
will be offset by the production from non-conventional sources, mainly oil from tar
sands in Canada and the extra heavy oil deposits in Venezuela. About 1.2 trillion
barrels of extra heavy oil are in place in Venezuela. At current technology and
prices only 2-3% of this endowment is economically recoverable but it is likely
that 100-270 billion barrels will eventually be economically recoverable. In
Canada, there are close to 180 billion barrels which could potentially be derived
from Alberta’s tar sands, making Canada second to Saudi Arabia in oil reserves.
Of this endowment, about 20% are economically recoverable at current market
conditions. Getting the oil out of the sand is expensive and complicated. It takes
about two tons of sand to extract one barrel of oil. If oil prices remain near current
levels oil-sands production would be profitable. There are also an estimated 800
billion barrels of oil contained in oil-shale deposits in Colorado, Utah and
Wyoming. That is more than triple the proven oil reserves of Saudi Arabia. But
with the currently available technologies, analysts say that crude-oil prices would
have to rise to somewhere around $70 a barrel, and stay there, in order to make
extraction financially viable.
19
U.S. Department of Energy, Enhanced Oil Recovery/CO2 Injection
http://www.fe.doe.gov/programs/oilgas/eor/
17
Strategic reserves
To compensate for the erosion in OPEC's spare capacity, major oil consuming
countries are taking steps to insulate their economies from supply disruptions by
creating liquidity mechanisms of their own. The U.S. keeps a strategic reserve of
over 700 million barrels, which can provide 1mbd relief for up to a year.
European and Asian consumers are also creating such oil banks albeit at a much
smaller extent. While certainly costly to build, strategic reserves would have the
long-term benefit of keeping the market liquid and hence reducing the economic
impact of supply disruptions.
Shift to alternatives
Throughout the world alternative fuels make a mere 2% of the transportation fuel
market. But rising oil prices have brought to a spike in demand and in production
of gasoline replacements. In many countries motor fuel is blended with ethanol,
an alcohol fuel made from corn or sugar cane. In Brazil, for example, ethanol
accounts for 20% of the country’s transportation fuel market today.20 Flexible fuel
vehicles can use any combination of gasoline and alcohol and cost under $150 to
manufacture over gasoline only cars. Millions of them are already on the road.
Over the last three years in Brazil, the share of new car sales that have fuel
flexibility has risen from 4% to 67%. In the U.S. major automakers have indicated
their plans to ramp up production of such cars.21 Biodiesel made from plant oil is
becoming increasingly popular. While global production of ethanol has more than
doubled since 2000, production of biodiesel has expanded nearly threefold. This
trend is going to continue. The biggest producers of biofuels--Brazil, the U.S., the
European Union, and China--all plan to more than double their production within
the next 15 years. No doubt the potential for biofuels is huge. According to the
World Watch Institute the world could theoretically harvest enough biomass to
satisfy the total anticipated global demand for transportation fuels by 2050.22 But
there are still significant barriers. Biofuels cost more than petrol and in some
cases take more energy to produce than the petroleum they aim to replace.
Technologies to convert cellulosic material to ethanol are still in the experimental
stage and will take years to commercialize. Furthermore, dependence on the
agricultural sector presents new threats to the transportation fuel market like
droughts, floods and disease.
In sum, technology exists today to enable next generation fuels and cars to
penetrate into the market in significant numbers. There is little doubt that
technology and innovation, along with steps toward conservation, will ultimately
reduce the share of petroleum in the transportation fuel sector. But such a
development will take time, and until this happens, oil will remain the lion share of
the world’s fuel mix.
In the past three decades the aviation industry has worked diligently to reduce
airplane fuel consumption. As a result newer airplanes are twice as fuel efficient
as those built 30 years ago. Compared with 50 years ago, the reduction is an
even more dramatic – 70%. Much of the efficiency gains were achieved through
improvements in the combustion process and the use of advanced materials
which allow engines to operate under higher temperatures. Improvements in
19
aerodynamic designs and introduction of lightweight materials have decreased
the weight and drag of modern airplanes. Improved maintenance practices have
also minimized unnecessary fuel consumption. Companies like Rolls-Royce,
General Electric and Pratt Whitney project fuel efficiency improvements of as
much as 10% by the end of the decade. There are other promising energy saving
technologies to reduce drag and allow planes to save fuel. Companies like
Southwest and Continental Airlines have installed "winglets" -- curled-up wing
ends – on their 737s. Though the retrofit costs about $700,000 per plane, high oil
prices ensure fast return on investment. Fuel savings of about 3% to 4% has
been achieved through this technology alone.23 Another technology, FuelMizer,
provides an additional 4%-plus fuel savings by repositioning the aft flap
segments to increase wing camber. 24 Fuel efficiency can also be improved
through austerity measures on the ground such as taxiing on a single engine,
balancing the load, and plugging in aircraft on the ground to auxiliary power units,
to use electricity, rather than liquid fuel.
When airplanes fly the most direct routes and spend less time idling before
takeoff and after landing, less jet fuel is used. Advanced air traffic management
technologies available today for aviation communications, navigation, and
surveillance (CNS) systems improve airline fuel efficiency by enabling planes to
calculate the most efficient routes and altitudes to take more direct routes
between destinations, use more airspace at currently prohibited lower elevations,
and minimize time waiting for landing and take-off strips. Airlines can develop
and introduce sophisticated flight planning software that can better calculate the
effects of wind and weather patterns. According to the U.S. Department of
Energy, CNS improvements can reduce commercial jet fuel consumption by 5%
by 2020. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) is even more
optimistic claiming that “worldwide, airlines could reduce their fuel consumption
by us to 18% with optimized air traffic control.”25 Unfortunately, since airlines are
dependent upon regulatory and air traffic authorities they do not have total
freedom to initiate self-help measures. Since air traffic is set to double in the next
two decades improvement in air traffic management is not only an economic
imperative but also a safety issue. Permitting airlines to select their own routes
could save significant amounts of fuel but this has to be done in ways that do not
compromise safety.
Higher oil prices are gradually encouraging the development of some alternative-
energy resources as replacements for traditional petroleum products. Though
many of these non-petroleum fuels carry a great deal of promise for the ground
23
“Cutting Fuel Costs,” Overhaul and Maintenance, July 25, 2005.
24
“Burn Less, Save More,” Air Transport World, November 2004.
25
“IATA: Better Traffic Control would Save Fuel, Reuters, July 13, 2005.
20
transportation sector, it is less clear whether such alternatives are viable for the
aviation industry. Virgin Atlantic Airways CEO Richard Branson said he has
undertaken plans to run his planes on alternative fuels manufactured from plant
waste.26 Most experts, however, hold that this vision is unrealistic since none of
the conventional fuel systems are likely to be able to handle these fuels in the
foreseeable future. The main problem biofuels pose for aircraft is that their
energy density is lower than that of conventional jet fuel. This means that more
fuel will have to be carried on board which will, in turn, increase drag and fuel
consumption as well as more frequent refueling.
Much more promising is the prospect of producing synthetic jet fuel from coal and
natural gas. The South African petrochemical company Sasol is renowned for
producing clean burning fuel from coal. Aircraft flying out of Johannesburg
International Airport already use semi-synthetic fuel made of 50% coal-derived jet
fuel blended with 50% traditional petroleum derived jet fuel.27 A growing number
of world fuel authorities are in the process of approving the fuel for wide use.
The company is also a leader in gas to liquids (GTL) technologies.
GTL technology involves transforming natural gas to liquids via Fischer-Tropsch
processes. Further upgrading of the liquids produces a range of super clean fuels
that can be blended into conventional fuels and used in existing engines both on
the ground and in the air.
Conclusion
While the airline industry is doing all it can to minimize costs by reducing its fuel
consumption, it has little influence on overall demand and global oil prices. Air
transportation accounts for only 6% of the world’s demand for refined petroleum
products. Even if the industry achieves a 20% efficiency improvement in the
coming decade, as many hope it will, this will save the equivalent of 1 million
barrels a day to the global oil market. This gain will be offset by an increase of
18mbd in global demand for oil which is currently projected for the same period
of time. Being a marginal consumer with limited capability to affect global oil
prices the air transport industry should look beyond minimizing its own fuel bill.
The industry should seek ways to affect the market at large and help reduce oil
prices. The sector where substantial oil savings can be achieved, in sufficient
quantity to drive down oil prices, is ground transportation. This sector alone
consumes over half of the world’s refined petroleum products. Therefore, in
addition to all the internal measures the air industry has taken it should also
support from the outside policies aimed to increase supply and reduce demand
for oil in the ground transportation sector. Unlike in the air, the ground
transportation sector can, given current technologies, relatively easily shift to
using alternative fuels such as ethanol, methanol, biodiesel, electricity, and
natural gas. Many countries have introduced policies which mandate and/or
26
“Virgin Airways Boss Eyes Plants for Fleet Fuel,” Reuters, November 16, 2005.
27
“Flying High on Coal,” Engineering News, December 7, 2005.
21
provide incentives for the deployment of alternative fuels and the cars that can
run on them. Japan, for example, announced recently that it will lower its oil
dependence in the transportation sector from nearly 100% to 80% by 2030.The
displaced 20% would be filled in by non-petroleum fuel sources.28 Such a
reduction alone would free close to 2mbd from the ground transportation sector.
Sweden recently announced that it plans to become the world’s first oil-free
economy by focusing in the next 15 years on a shift to renewable energy.29
Oil saving initiatives are currently being deliberated in the U.S. where almost
9mbd are used to power cars and trucks. In his 2006 State of the Union
Address, President George Bush declared that “America is addicted to oil,” and
proposed to reduce oil imports from the Middle East by 75% over the next twenty
years. Bills pending in the U.S. Congress propose oil saving of 2.5mbd by 2015,
using existing vehicle and fuel technologies. Such national energy initiatives are
long overdue. Given high oil prices and continuing instability most consuming
countries are likely to look inward and try to devise policies designed to reduce
their oil consumption only to be met by resistance by defenders of the status quo.
This is where stakeholders from highly affected industries could tip the balance in
favor of such measures. With its centrality in the modern economy and its
political influence the air transport industry could play an important role in this
transition.
17%
26%
Gasoline
10% Jet fuel
Kerosene
Distillate fuel
6%
Residual fuel
13% 2%
LPG
Other
26%
28
“Gov’t to seek cut in oil dependency,” The Yomiuri Shimbun, January 6, 2006.
29
“Sweden Wants to be Oil Free by 2020,” Guardian, February 7, 2006.
22