
上世紀70年代,沙特阿拉伯石油部長Yamani曾說過:石器時代的結束,并不是因為石頭沒有了;同樣地,石油時代的終結,也不并是因為石油沒有了。受電動汽車發展的影響,未來數十年,汽車工業的結構性變化將對全球原油需求產生不可逆轉的打擊。事實真將如此嗎?
電動汽車革命的槍聲已打響
隨著電池技術的不斷突破,新能源汽車成本一降再降,加上傳統內燃機汽車的碳排放問題,近年來電動汽車呈現迅猛發展態勢。根據彭博新能源財經(BNEF)的報道, 電動汽車革命的槍聲已打響,如果長期預測足夠準確的話,其影響力將波及全球經濟的每一個角落。
由于風能和太陽能設備數量的驟增,使用傳統化石燃料發電已經變得非常不經濟。在美國,幾乎各大煤炭公司都在申請破產保護或處于財務困境之中,過去一個世紀美國的主要電力能源行業正在逐漸沒落。即便是太陽能和風能的小小滲透,都足以在整個電力市場掀起波瀾,不過目前只是處在革命的開端。
近日,BNEF創始人之一Michael Liebreich表示,這一演變對未來造成的長期影響絕非夸張。例如,目前的電力行業正變得越來越依賴多元化動力來源,整個電網系統正變得更清潔、更數字化。特別是清潔能源,正逐漸成為電動車的競爭對手。
BNEF預計,到2040年,電動汽車將占全球汽車市場的35%。而且由于技術發展太快,屆時占有率可能更高。按最夸張的情形預測,到2040年,所有銷售的新車中電動汽車將占47%。
電動汽車優勢凸顯
IEA在今年年中發布的《2016全球電動汽車展望》顯示,過去十年里,電動汽車的電池生產成本下降近3/4,并將保持繼續下降趨勢,同時電池的能量密度增加五倍,但仍將提高以適應更長里程。
電池成本的快速下降,將是電動車爆發式增長的關鍵因素。BNEF表示,電動汽車在很多方面比內燃機汽車更具優勢,不僅僅是排放。
Liebreich寫道,電動汽車“動力驅動更順暢,而且加速較穩,可以在家里或辦公室進行充電,維護少,可以避免化石燃料的污染排放,進而也能提高石油進口國的能源自主權?!?/span>
另外,當涉及到自動駕駛、信息娛樂系統等功能時,電動汽車也都“大大優于”以化石燃料為動力的汽車。Liebreich稱,“比較兩種動力系統:傳統汽車震動大、使用揮發的液體能源污染環境;電動汽車則完全數字化,配備許多傳感器,有可靠的電子元件控制系統,哪種更有未來顯而易見?!?/span>
考慮到這些,他得出了一個令石油業非常擔憂的疑問,“15年后,有什么樣的理由讓您愿意購買一臺柴油或汽油驅動的二等車呢”?
未來電動汽車將對化石燃料產業相關的獨家供應商產生巨大沖擊。在這種大背景下,軟件、網絡安全和其他幫助電網運營商解決負載平衡的數字技術將得到發展。當然電力供應系統必不可少,電動汽車本身需要大量的電能,同時當連接到電網系統后,電動汽車本身也能成為一個小型發電設備。
因此,受電動汽車革命影響最大的非石油業莫屬。根據BNEF的預測,到2040年,電動汽車將使原油需求量減少1300萬桶/天。這一數字并不夸張——如果事實果真如此,OPEC到那時肯定不會再實施凍產計劃,油價也不會太高。
各國政策:未來發展態勢初現端倪
目前,為配合國際減排目標,德國推行一項新規定,到2030年,德國所有新登記的汽車都將需要達到零排放的標準,這就意味著,傳統的燃油汽車將面臨禁售的局面。
而在德國之前,荷蘭、挪威也都提出了2025年禁售燃油車的計劃,其中挪威還是西歐最大的產油國、全球主要產油國之一。去年年底在巴黎召開的聯合國氣候變化大會上,由德國、英國、荷蘭、挪威以及美國18個州組成的“零排放車輛同盟”宣布,到2050年,聯盟內的國家將不允許銷售燃油車。
在中國,國家發改委也在2015年底也表示,未來幾年,純電動汽車所需的技術都將得到突破,到2025年,在國內所有新增車輛中,將全部以純電為動力的新能源汽車取代以內燃機作為動力的傳統汽車。
BP:電動車時代形成尚需時日
BP首席經濟學家Spencer Dale對BNEF談及電動汽車對全球石油產業的沖擊時表示,電動車時代一定會來臨,這不是“是否”的問題,而是“什么時間點”的問題,但由電動車主導的時代不會來得那么快。
Spencer Dale坦言,目前,與電動汽車相比,內燃機仍有很多優勢,而且其技術本身也正在進行改進。石油是一種高熱量的密集型能源,非常適合用于交通領域。當電動汽車大行其道時,很顯然它會對石油需求帶來影響,但那一天要真正到來,尚需時日。
另外,Spencer Dale也表示,三四十年后的世界將與今天截然不同,比電動車更厲害、能帶來更大影響的是人工智能,它將會橫掃所有行業。在人工智能面前,所有行業都不得不做出變革,能源行業也不例外。
同時,作為傳統石油巨頭,除了調整產品結構、加碼天然氣及可再生能源投資外,BP也在投資小型初創企業。BP希望通過這些投資去把握先機,了解最新的技術是什么樣子、如何用,以及它們會對各個行業產生什么影響等。
BNEF也表示,電動汽車革命對油價的影響,可能正從長久影響轉向永久影響。據悉,2015-2020年間,石油業的投資額將減少1萬億,這可能導致因上線項目過少而出現石油供應短缺的現象。長期來看,如果油價長期保持低位,所有產油大國(如沙特阿拉伯、伊朗、伊拉克、俄羅斯、委內瑞拉等)都將陷入危機中。
作者/Nick Cunningham ? ? 譯者/白小明 ? ? ?編輯/王月
The electric car revolution is already underway, and if the long-term projections are even remotely close to accurate, the effects will ripple through every corner of the global economy.
A large chunk of conventional fossil fuel powered electricity generation is already uneconomic because of the surge of wind and solar installations. Nearly every major U.S. coal mining company has either filed for bankruptcy or is in financial distress, a glaring sign that the industry that powered the U.S. electrical grid for a century is dying off.
Even the relatively small penetrations of solar and wind are upending electricity markets, but we are merely at the beginning of this revolution. As Michael Liebreich of Bloomberg New Energy Finance wrote on August 22, the long-term ramifications of this unfolding phenomenon are hard to overstate.
Take the electricity sector as an example, which is flipping from being an industry based on huge power plants that provide baseload power with peaker plants to provide supply during peak times, to a power sector that relies much more heavily on disparate sources that depend on “forecast-and-balance” services. That is a jumbled way of saying that the electricity grid is changing fast because of clean energy – for decades the grid has hardly changed, but electrical equipment is becoming cleaner, more digitized, and won’t necessarily resemble what it has in the past.
But that isn’t just an issue for the competitors of clean energy (coal and natural gas); the effects could spread throughout the economy. The case of cell phones is illustrative – cell phones “have eaten entire industries (cameras, alarm clocks, maps) and are set to do the same to others (newspapers, cash handling, music systems),” Liebreich explains.
BNEF projects that EVs will capture 35 percent of the global vehicle market by 2040. But because technology is changing fast, the surprise is probably on the upside. Under a more aggressive scenario, BNEF can see a scenario in which 47 percent of all new vehicles sold in 2040 will be electric.
The rapidly falling cost of batteries will be a key reason for the explosive growth of EVs. Battery costs have already declined by 65 percent over the past five years, and could fall by half again by 2025.
But while some doubters of EVs might dismiss such figures, BNEF says EVs will beat the internal-combustion engine on many more fronts than just emissions. As Liebreich writes, EVs “drive more smoothly yet accelerate better, they can be charged at home or at the office, they require much less maintenance, they help solve air quality problems, they improve the energy autonomy of oil-importing countries.” EVs also are “vastly superior” to fossil fuel-powered vehicles when it comes to autonomous driving, infotainment, and other features. “[I]t simply makes no sense to have an inherently analogue power unit – vibrating, volatile-liquid-consuming, hot-polluting-exhaust-producing – at the heart of a fully digital, sensor-pervaded, solid-state-electronics-controlled system,” Liebreich argues.
With that in mind, he comes to a conclusion that should deeply worry the oil industry: “can anyone think of a good reason to buy a diesel or petrol second car in 15 years?”
What are the implications of this? There will be winners and losers, BNEF says. The winners: battery manufacturers, lithium miners, and a whole supply chain of technology needed for these new vehicles, such as autonomous driving, cyber-security, and other software tech. The losers: suppliers of parts exclusive to fossil fuel vehicles, such as exhaust systems, fuel management systems, gearboxes, etc. Also, less steel will be used in EVs as companies try to reduce weight. Less maintenance also means less need for mechanics, repair shops, and dealerships. Repairs can often be done remotely using software, just as many computer fixes are conducted today.
Then of course there is the electric power system. EVs themselves will allow for more demand response – an army of EVs provide new source a large source of new demand, but also millions of little power plants when connected to the grid. Software, cyber-security, and other digital tech that helps gird operators deal with load balancing will thrive in this environment.
Finally, perhaps the most devastating effect of the EV revolution will be on the oil industry. BNEF forecasts EVs cutting off 13 million barrels per day of oil demand by 2040. The implications of that figure are hard to exaggerate – if it comes to pass, it effectively means permanently lower oil prices.
The prevailing view in the industry is that the $1 trillion or so in investment reductions between 2015 and 2020 will set the world up for a supply crunch as too few projects come online. But, BNEF says that the EV revolution could mean the off-cited mantra in the industry of prices remaining “lower for longer” could become “lower forever.” BNEF says the long-term cap on oil prices is $80 per barrel and is falling fast. The effects are so massive they are hard to even contemplate – whole countries will be tossed into crisis (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Russia, Venezuela, to name a few) if oil prices remain permanently low.
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