A Pan-Asian Energy Transition? The New Rationale for Decarbonization Policies in the World’s Largest Energy Exporting Countries: A Case Study of Qatar and Other GCC Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework and Methodology
2.1. Theoretical Framework
2.2. Methodology
3. Literature Review: Global Energy Transition and Recent Decarbonization Policies
3.1. Energy Transitions around the World
3.2. A Review of Decarbonization Policies across Major Asian Energy Importing Countries
Country | Net Zero Target | Emission Reduction Target for 2030 | Renewables Targets (2030) | Nuclear Energy Targets (2030) |
---|---|---|---|---|
China [20] | 2060 | Peak CO2 emissions before 2030 | Increase its installed capacity of wind and solar power to 1.2 billion kilowatts by 2030 | 120–150 GW by 2030 |
Chinese Taipei/Taiwan [25] | 2050 | GHG reduction by 50% from the business-as-usual level | Target of 17,250 MW in 2030 | The non-nuclear homeland policy |
India [21] | 2070 | GHG reduction by 45 percent from 2005 level | 450 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030 | Total nuclear capacity is likely to be around 22.5 GWe by 2031. |
Japan (Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. (2018). (Basic energy plan (6th ed.). Retrieved from https://www.enecho.meti.go.jp/en/category/others/basic_plan/pdf/6th_outline.pdf) [27] Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. (2022). Clean Energy Strategy Interim Report (Outline). Retrieved from https://www.meti.go.jp/english/policy/energy_environment/global_warming/pdf/clean_energy_strategy.pdf) | 2050 | GHG reduction by 46% compared to the 2013 level | Renewable energy set to account for 36–38% of the energy mix by 2030 | 20–22% of the energy mix |
[28] South Korea (the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy. (2017). 8th Basic Plan for Long-term Electricity Supply and Demand (2017–2031). Retrieved from https://policy.asiapacificenergy.org/sites/default/files/8th%20Basic%20Plan%20for%20Long-term%20Electricity%20Supply%20and%20Demand%20%282017%20-%202031%29.pdf) | 2050 | GHG reduction by 40% compared to the 2018 level | Producing 20% of electricity from renewables by 2030 | 23.4% by 2029 share of nuclear energy in the energy mix |
Singapore [31] | 2050 | GHG reduction by 36% compared to the 2005 level (reaching 60 MtCO2) | The renewable in this case is mainly solar energy: reaching. 2 gigawatt-peak by 2030 | No information is available about the possible energy mix scenarios including nuclear power by 2030. However, by 2050 the Energy Market Authority of Singapore announced nuclear energy will make up about 10% of its energy mix. |
3.3. Toward an Energy Transition in the GCC Countries: The Case of Qatar
4. A Case Study of Qatar and Other GCC Countries: Gulf States and Qatar’s Policies for Decarbonized Exports
4.1. Decarbonization via Energy Export Sophistication: Qatar’s Decarbonization Policies and Changes
4.2. Green Hydrogen Investment in the GCC and the Potential for Partnerships
4.3. Ongoing Hydrogen Developments in the GCC
4.4. The Role and Potential of CCS/CCUS in the Decarbonization of the Energy Industry
4.5. CCS/CCUS in the GCC Region
4.6. CCS/CCUS in the Case of Qatar
4.7. Qatar Blue Hydrogen
4.8. Decarbonization Potential of Natural Carbon Sinks in Hydrocarbons Exporting Countries: The Case of Mangrove Forestry in Qatar
5. Results and Conclusions
5.1. Emissions Accounting and Techno-Economic Analysis of GCC Countries
5.2. Emissions by Sectors in the GCC Region
5.3. Emissions Trajectories
5.4. Costs of the Reforms and Investment Costs by Country
5.5. The Economical Impact of the Reforms Due to the Reduction in Oil Exports
5.6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Operational | In Construction | Advanced Development | Early Development | Operation Suspended | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Facilities | 30 | 11 | 78 | 75 | 2 | 196 |
Capture Capacity (mtpa) | 42.5 | 9.6 | 97.6 | 91.8 | 2.3 | 243.9 |
Project Name | Country | Facility Status | Operational Date | Capture Capacity (mtpa CO2) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Uthmaniyah CO2-EOR Demonstration (a) | Saudi Arabia | Operational | 2015 | 0.8 |
Abu Dhabi CCS (Phase 1 Being Emirates Steel Industries) (a) | UAE | Operational | 2016 | 0.8 |
Qatar LNG CCS (a) | Qatar | Operational | 2019 | 2.2 |
Qatar Gas (b) | Qatar | Operational | 2021 | 1.18 |
North Field East Project (NFE) CCS (a) | Qatar | In construction | 2025 | 1 |
Abu Dhabi CCS Phase 2: Natural Gas Processing Plant (a) | UAE | Advanced development | 2025 | 2.3 |
Ghasha Concession Fields (a) | UAE | Advanced development | 2025 | Under evaluation |
Ammonia-7 Project (c) | Qatar | - | 2026 | 1.5 |
All Costs in USD Per kg of Hydrogen | Dedicated Renewable Electricity Supply | Otherwise, Curtailed Renewable Electricity Supply | Steam Methane Reformation with Ccs | Black Coal Gasification with Ccs |
---|---|---|---|---|
CSIRO 2018 | USD 7.70 | USD 18.20 | USD 1.80 | USD 2.00 |
IEA 2019 | USD 3.75 | - | USD 2.00 | USD 2.00 |
IRENA 2019 | USD 4.10 | - | USD 2.50 | USD 2.00 |
Hydrogen Council 2020 | USD 6.00 | - | USD 2.10 | USD 2.00 |
Simple average of costs from these four reports | USD 5.40 | USD 18.20 | USD 2.10 | USD 2.00 |
Country | Total GHG Emissions |
---|---|
Qatar | Around 90 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
Saudi Arabia | Around 600 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
United Arab Emirates | Around 250 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
Kuwait | Roughly 100 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
Oman | Around 50 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
Bahrain | Around 35 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually. |
Country | Reform | Forecast |
---|---|---|
Qatar | National Climate Change Action Plan 2030: Energy efficiency and solar power for substantial reductions in emissions. | Reducing around 30 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually by 2030 |
Saudi Arabia | Vision 2030: Generating 50% of its energy from renewable sources (significant investments in solar and wind energy) by 2030 | If the targets are achieved, emissions could be reduced by 130 million metric tons of CO2 per year by 2030. |
United Arab Emirates | Energy Strategy 2050: Increasing the clean energy share in the total energy mix to 50% by 2050. | If the strategy is fully implemented, emissions could be lowered to about 70 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually by 2050. |
Kuwait | Kuwait Vision 2035: Plans for renewable energy and energy efficiency improvements. | Emissions could be reduced by about 20 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually by 2035. |
Oman | National Energy Strategy: Diversification of its energy sources and increasing the use of renewable energy sources. | Emissions might be reduced by 10–15 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually by 2030. |
Bahrain | National Renewable Energy Action Plan: Targeting 5% renewable energy in the total energy mix by 2025 and 10% by 2035. | Emissions could be decreased by 5–10 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually by 2035. |
Country | Cost of the Reforms |
---|---|
Qatar | National Climate Change Action Plan 2030 Renewable Energy Initiatives: About USD 10–15 billion for solar and other renewable energy projects. Energy Efficiency Programs: The cost estimation is around USD 5–10 billion. |
Saudi Arabia | Vision 2030 Renewable Energy Projects: Estimated at about USD 30–50 billion to meet the target of 50% renewable energy by 2030. Energy Efficiency Measures: Investing to improve energy efficiency across different sectors with an expected cost of approximately USD 10–20 billion. CCS and Hydrogen Production: The estimated costs for CCS and green hydrogen production projects are about USD 5–10 billion. |
United Arab Emirates | Energy Strategy 2050 Renewable Energy Investments: About USD 160 billion to increase the share of clean energy to 50% by 2050. Nuclear Power Plants: The cost of the Barakah nuclear power plant is about USD 24.4 billion. Energy Efficiency Improvements: The expected cost for investments is around USD 10–15 billion. |
Kuwait | Kuwait Vision 2035 Renewable Energy Projects: The cost of developing renewable energy infrastructure is around USD 15–20 billion. Energy Efficiency Measures: The expected costs are about USD 5–8 billion. |
Oman | National Energy Strategy Renewable Energy Development: The estimated cost for solar and wind projects is USD 5–10 billion. Energy Efficiency Improvements: The expected cost is around USD 2–4 billion. |
Bahrain | National Renewable Energy Action Plan Renewable Energy Investments: About USD 2–5 billion is required to achieve the 2025 and 2035 targets. Energy Efficiency Measures: The expected costs are about USD 1–2 billion. |
Country | Electricity Generation | Transportation | Housing | Agriculture | Other Sectors | Total Emissions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qatar | 50 | 20 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 100 |
Saudi Arabia | 300 | 150 | 80 | 70 | 70 | 670 |
United Arab Emirates | 125 | 75 | 35 | 15 | 50 | 300 |
Kuwait | 50 | 30 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 110 |
Oman | 25 | 15 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 60 |
Bahrain | 20 | 8 | 4 | 3 | 8 | 43 |
Country | Current Emissions | Projected Reduction by 2030 | Projected Reduction by 2035 | Projected Reduction by 2050 | Emission in 2030 | Emission in 2035 | Emission in 2050 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qatar | 100 million metric tons | 30 million metric tons | - | - | 70 million metric tons | - | - |
Saudi Arabia | 670 million metric tons | 130 million metric tons | - | - | 540 million metric tons | - | - |
United Arab Emirates | 300 million metric tons | - | - | 70 million metric tons | - | - | 70 million metric tons |
Kuwait | 110 million metric tons | - | 20 million metric tons | - | - | 90 million metric tons | - |
Oman | 60 million metric tons | 10–15 million metric tons | - | - | 45–50 million metric tons | - | - |
Bahrain | 43 million metric tons | - | 5–10 million metric tons | - | - | 33–38 million metric tons | - |
Country | Total Cost | Total Current Emissions | Total Projected Emissions Reduction by 2030 | Total Projected Emissions Reduction by 2035 | Total Projected Emissions Reduction by 2050 | Total Investment Required |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qatar | USD 15–25 billion | 1125 million metric tons | 170–175 million metric tons | 25–30 million metric tons | - | USD 284.4–353.4 billion |
Saudi Arabia | USD 45–80 billion | - | ||||
United Arab Emirates | USD 194.4–199.4 billion | 70 million metric tons | ||||
Kuwait | USD 20–28 billion | - | ||||
Oman | USD 7–14 billion | - | ||||
Bahrain | USD 3–7 billion | - |
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Abdallah, I.; Alhosin, H.; Belarabi, M.; Chaouki, S.; Mahmoud, N.; Tayah, J. A Pan-Asian Energy Transition? The New Rationale for Decarbonization Policies in the World’s Largest Energy Exporting Countries: A Case Study of Qatar and Other GCC Countries. Energies 2024, 17, 3776. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153776
Abdallah I, Alhosin H, Belarabi M, Chaouki S, Mahmoud N, Tayah J. A Pan-Asian Energy Transition? The New Rationale for Decarbonization Policies in the World’s Largest Energy Exporting Countries: A Case Study of Qatar and Other GCC Countries. Energies. 2024; 17(15):3776. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153776
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbdallah, Ismail, Hamed Alhosin, Mohamed Belarabi, Sanae Chaouki, Nousseiba Mahmoud, and Jad Tayah. 2024. "A Pan-Asian Energy Transition? The New Rationale for Decarbonization Policies in the World’s Largest Energy Exporting Countries: A Case Study of Qatar and Other GCC Countries" Energies 17, no. 15: 3776. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153776