The IEAâs latest World Energy Outlook was published on Wednesday. This yearâs WEO-2021 is released earlier than usual to inform COP26 and, for the first time, is available for free to ensure the widest possible audience. Simon Evans at Carbon Brief offers his summary of the 386-page report, quoting relevant numbers and charts. He first points to the new scenario, Net-Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE), as the IEAâs recognition that this is what everyone should be aiming for and therefore needs close analysis. Its fixed aim is limiting warming to 1.5°C. The IEA flags up four key measures; electrification, efficiency, as well as methane emissions and innovation. Though the clean energy economy is coming into view, a massive push is needed in the next decade. Wind and solar are already the âcheapest available source of new electricity generationâ in âmost regionsâ, and EVs are reaching a cost-competitive tipping point. So, fossil fuels can peak in 2025. But glaring ambition and implementation gaps remain. They can start to be overcome by understanding that over 40% of the actions needed will cut costs (think cheap renewables and efficiency gains). And clean energy will be a net job creator. But governments risk failure if they donât focus on a secure, affordable and just transition â the IEA devotes a whole chapter to this. Other risks include the destabilising effect of the inevitable upheavals in power markets, as well as how extreme weather, sea level rises and water accessibility endanger energy-related infrastructure.
Demand for fossil fuels will peak by 2025 if countries meet their climate pledges, according to the latest World Energy Outlook 2021 from the International Energy Agency (IEA).
However, this yearâs 386-page outlook â calling itself a âguidebookâ for the upcoming COP26 climate summit â highlights the gaps between the policies already in place, the ambition set out in countriesâ climate pledges and the significant additional efforts needed to keep global warming below 1.5C.
2030: crucial decade needs massive push
These gaps can be closed over the âcrucialâ decade to 2030, the IEA says, with a âmassiveâ push for wind, solar and other low-carbon electricity; a ârelentlessâ focus on energy efficiency; a âbroad driveâ to cut methane from fossil-fuel operations; and a âbig boostâ to clean-energy innovation.
It says a successful transition towards 1.5C would avoid âimmense risksâ from climate inaction and create a $1.2tn market for clean energy that would rival the current size of the oil industry.
For the first time, the IEA has also put a Paris-compliant pathway at the heart of its highly influential outlook. Its 1.5C ânet-zero emissions by 2050â scenario (NZE), first outlined in May, is the most mentioned pathway in the report, Carbon Brief analysis shows.
Elsewhere, the report contradicts much of the worldâs media coverage in its analysis of the current global energy crisis. The âkey reasonsâ for record-high prices include economic rebound from the pandemic, the IEA says, and âare not related to efforts to transition to clean energyâ.
New scenarios: Net-Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE)
The IEAâs annual World Energy Outlook (WEO) is published every autumn and is widely regarded as one of the most influential annual contributions to the climate and energy debate.
It explores a range of scenarios, representing different possible futures for the global energy system, using its âWorld Energy Modelâ and âEnergy Technology Perspectivesâ model.
This yearâs outlook sees a significant shift in the IEAâs menu of scenarios. For the first time, it places the new 1.5C-compatible NZE scenario at the heart of the report. The NZE is mentioned more frequently than any of the other pathways, as shown in red in the chart below.
The NZE is what the IEA calls a ânormativeâ scenario, meaning it starts with a fixed aim â limiting warming to 1.5C â and then works backwards to see how it would be possible to get there.

Number of mentions of each IEA scenario in World Energy Outlooks since 2017, per 100 pages of text. CPS: Current policies scenario; STEPS: Stated policies scenario; SDS: Sustainable development scenario; NZE: Net-zero emissions by 2050 scenario; APS: Announced pledges scenario. Prior to 2020 the STEPS was known as the ânew policies scenarioâ (NPS). Totals combine uses of the relevant acronyms as well as full scenario names. / Source: Carbon Brief analysis of the last five IEA outlooks. Chart by Carbon Brief using Highcharts.
The two other main pathways in this yearâs report are âexploratoryâ scenarios, meaning they look at what might happen, given the current set of government policies and pledges, as well as expected changes in population, economic growth and technology development.
âŚSTEPS, APS, SDS
The first is the âstated policies scenarioâ (STEPS), based on the IEAâs assessment of government policies already in place or firmly under development (dark blue in the chart, above). The second is the âannounced pledges scenarioâ (APS), where government climate pledges are met in full (grey).
In the UK, for example, table B.6 explains that the STEPS includes the governmentâs 10 point plan and energy white paper, whereas only the APS includes full implementation of the updated Paris climate pledge, sixth carbon budget and net-zero by 2050 target.
The outlook also includes the IEAâs âsustainable development scenarioâ (SDS), a pathway towards âwell-below 2Câ that the agency was last year calling âfully alignedâ with the Paris Agreement.
Notably, the old âcurrent policies scenarioâ (CPS), often used in the past to justify continued investment in fossil fuels, no longer features at all, having been temporarily left out last year.
The introduction to the outlook emphasises that this yearâs report is a âspecial editionâ, with a different structure aimed at the COP26 talks. While the structure of future outlooks âremains openâ, the NZE ânow joins the stable of core IEA scenariosâŚin the WEO seriesâ.
Although the NZE is now a core scenario, it is not fully featured in the outlookâs data tables. It is only reported at global level, in contrast to the regional breakdowns for the STEPS, APS and SDS.
(Another subtle, but significant shift in this yearâs outlook is the use of exajoules â the standard unit for energy â to report global energy supply, instead of millions of tonnes of oil equivalent. The IEA joins oil major BP, which made the same move in its 2020 statistical review of world energy.)
Net-zero
The shift in focus in this yearâs WEO manifests itself in other ways, with the phrase ânet-zeroâ used around 75 times per 100 pages, up from 38 times in 2020 and just once per 100 pages in 2018. Similarly, the term â1.5Câ appears 19 times per 100 pages, double the rate last year.
In the WEO 2019, when the IEA first made tentative steps towards addressing the 1.5C target, it said the goal would âpose challenges that would be very difficult and very expensive to surmountâ.
Now, it emphasises the âimmenseâ risks of unabated emissions, both in terms of human health and in the physical risks from extreme weather events, where âthe energy sector will feel the impactâ.
The outlook also highlights the âunmistakeable signs of changeâ that are already shifting the curve of emissions, saying that a ânew energy economy is coming into viewâ. It says:
âThere is no guarantee that the emergence of this new energy economy will be smooth, and it is not coming forward quickly enough to avoid severe impacts from a changing climate. But it is already clear that tomorrowâs energy economy promises to be quite different from the one we have today.â
(The outlook also sounds a note of caution, explored further below, saying: âAt the moment, however, every data point showing the speed of change in energy can be countered by another showing the stubbornness of the status quo.â)
The IEA says that â[t]he potential prize is huge for those who make the leap to the new energy economyâ, adding that the market for clean energy technologies would exceed $1tn a year by 2050 under the NZE 1.5C pathway, an amount it compares with the current global oil market.
The encouraging news is that a New Energy Economy Is Emerging#WEO2021 shows that pursuing #NetZero can create a market opportunity for equipment like batteries & wind turbines worth over $1 trillion a year by 2050 â similar to todayâs oil market
More: https://t.co/JXPMBBp2Ii pic.twitter.com/mvChbXQ2sJ
â Fatih Birol (@fbirol) October 13, 2021
Jobs
The report says that clean-energy jobs will âmore than offset [âŚ] the decline in traditional fossil fuel supply sectorsâ. Jobs growth in renewables, cars, efficiency, electricity generation and other areas would easily outweigh losses in coal, oil and gas, the IEA says, creating a global net gain of around 13 million jobs by 2030 in the APS and double that in the NZE.
Fossil peak, cheap clean energy
The outlook goes on to set out the implications of each scenario for the global energy system, arguing that progress in the ânew energy economyâ is now âsustained by lower costsâ.
This means, for example, that wind and solar are already the âcheapest available source of new electricity generationâ in âmost regionsâ, according to the IEA, and there is a âcompelling caseâ for electric vehicles (EVs) in âmany marketsâ, based on total cost of ownership.
These developments, along with the climate policies already in place in the stated policies scenario (STEPS) mean that low-carbon sources are set to meet âalmost all of the net growth in energy demandâ over the next three decades, the IEA says.
As a result, while fossil fuel use rebounds over the next five years, it soon peaks and then plateaus out to 2050 â even under the âmore conservative benchmarkâ of the STEPS, where countries fail to fully implement their climate pledges. This is shown by the grey line in the chart below.
By September 2021, the IEA says that some 53 countries and the EU had pledged to reach net-zero emissions, accounting for around two-thirds of global CO2 emissions. Since then, Russia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates have added their names to this list.
(The IEA says Chinaâs 2060 net-zero pledge has âglobal significanceâ. A detailed IEA study with âleading energy experts in Chinaâ shows how the country could reach this goal, saying there is âno plausible pathâ to 1.5C without China. It adds: âFaster progress before 2030 is possible and beneficial.â)
If countries meet their net-zero and other new climate goals, as in the APS, then the IEAâs outlook suggests that fossil-fuel emissions would peak by 2025 and then start to rapidly decline (red line).

Global energy supply from coal, oil and gas, exajoules, 1965-2050. The black line shows historical data while the IEA STEPS is in grey and the APS in red, with the NZE as dashed yellow. The vertical line marks the fossil fuel peak in 2025 under the APS. / Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2021 and BP Statistical Review 2020. Chart by Carbon Brief using Highcharts.
Despite a peak and decline in fossil fuel use, the ambition of the worldâs climate pledges still falls well short of what would be needed to stay below 1.5C, as shown by the dashed yellow line.
This outlook reiterates the message of its 1.5C report that this pathway would entail no investment in new oil and gas fields, beyond those already approved for development.
Warming limits: 2.6°C, 2.1°C or 1.5°C?
Overall, the IEA says emissions are set to decline only marginally by 2050 under the currently implemented policies included in the STEPS, as shown in the figure below (blue line). This would mean temperatures in 2100 reaching some 2.6C above pre-industrial levels, the IEA says.
(The temperature projections, based on the âMAGICCâ simplified climate model, assume that non-energy greenhouse gases are reduced proportionally with CO2 emissions and that the trends to 2050 continue for the rest of the century.)
Although 2.6C is a long way off meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement, it represents huge progress since the âpre-Paris baselineâ (red line, blue wedge), according to the chart, which was tweeted by IEA executive director Fatih Birol at the launch of the outlook.
If countries fulfill their latest âGlasgowâ climate pledges, as in the APS (yellow), warming would be limited to 2.1C this century â closer to, but still far short of the âwell-below 2Câ Paris goal.

Global energy-related emissions 2000-2050 under the scenarios set out in the WEO 2021 and the pre-Paris baseline, billions of tonnes. / Source: Fatih Birol, IEA.
However, an âimplementation gapâ between countriesâ ambition and the policies they have in place, amounting to some 2.6bn tonnes of carbon dioxide (GtCO2) in 2030, stands between the current trajectory towards 2.6C and the 2.1C that could be achieved under countriesâ pledges.
Moreover, there is an even larger 12GtCO2 âambition gapâ between those pledges and the 1.5C stretch target of the Paris deal, which could be met under the IEAâs NZE scenario.
This means todayâs pledges cover âless than 20%â of the emissions reductions needed to âkeep a 1.5C path within reachâ, the IEA says.
COP26 and the ambition gap
With its eye firmly on informing discussions at the COP26 climate summit, the IEA devotes a full chapter of its outlook to the 1.5C âambition gapâ and what would be needed to close it.
The outlook says: âAll countries need to do more: those with existing net-zero pledges account for about half of the additional reductions, notably China.â
It identifies four key areas where countries need to make progress in the âcrucial periodâ to 2030 and says that more than 40% of the actions involved are cost-effective, purely in terms of the savings they would create for consumers, relative to the APS.
The IEAâs proposals for closing the ambition gap are shown in the waterfall chart, below, with the cost-effective portion further broken down in the lower portion of the figure.

Top: Measures for closing the ambition gap between countriesâ climate pledges (APS) and a 1.5C pathway (NZE). Reading left to right: cost-effective technology; avoided demand; behaviour change; and additional reductions. Bottom: Measures making up the cost-effective portion. / Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2021.
Four âkey measuresâ: clean electrificationâŚ
The first and most important of the four âkey measuresâ identified by the report is a âmassive pushâ for clean electrification, based on a doubling of wind and solar deployment relative to the APS, along with a âmajor expansionâ of other low-carbon sources, including nuclear power âwhere acceptableâ. This would cut emissions in 2030 by around 5GtCO2 in 2030.
The IEA also calls a ârapid phaseout of coalâ â by 2030 in advanced economies and 2040 globally â and an end to new investment decisions in coal, with the potential to avoid 0.8GtCO2 of emissions in 2030.
Larger supplies of clean electricity would need to be complemented by a âhuge build-outâ of electricity infrastructure and âall formsâ of grid flexibility. (The electricity sector would reach net-zero emissions overall by 2035 in advanced economies and by 2040 globally).
(Figure 4.29 in the outlook breaks down the sources of grid flexibility in 2050 under different scenarios, with demand response and batteries making up around half the total under the NZE, with hydro and other renewables adding another quarter. The remaining share is mainly met by hydrogen, with smaller roles for nuclear and fossil gas.)
âŚenergy efficiency
The second key measure is a ârelentlessâ focus on energy efficiency, along with measures to âtemperâ demand through material efficiency and behaviour change. Together, the IEA says these could close some 2.6GtCO2 of the ambition gap.
However, doing so would require the energy intensity of the global economy to improve by 4% a year to 2030, more than double the rate seen in the decade to 2020. The outlook adds that more than 80% of these gains would generate cost savings for consumers.
âŚcut methane emissions
The third measure is to cut methane emissions from fossil-fuel operations, particularly the oil and gas industry, with the potential to avoid 1.7GtCO2 equivalent in 2030.
âŚclean energy innovation
The fourth key area identified by the outlook is to âboost clean energy innovationâ, even though this will not have a major impact on emissions until after 2030. The report explains:
âAll the technologies needed to achieve deep emissions cuts to 2030 are available. But almost half of the emissions reductions achieved in the NZE in 2050 come from technologies that today are at the demonstration or prototype stage.â
Climate action is not to blame for the energy crisis
In the outlook itself and a commentary published a day earlier, the IEA pushes back on the idea â widely promoted by the media â that climate action is to blame for the current global energy crisis.
The commentary says that gas, coal and electricity prices have climbed to their âhighest levels in decadesâ as a result of a rapid economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, a prolonged cold winter in the northern hemisphere and outages affecting fossil-fuel supply.
The piece argues it is âinaccurate and misleading to lay the responsibility at the door of the clean energy transitionâ, while the foreword to the outlook says â[t]he key reasons for these sharp increases in energy prices are not related to efforts to transition to clean energyâ.
Transition risks
Nevertheless, the foreword says that governmentsâ plans to shift to clean energy ârisk failureâ if they are not âsecure, affordable and fair for all citizensâ.
Addressing these risks, the outlook devotes an entire chapter to the need for âsecure transitionsâ:
âBy design, the scenarios in this outlook describe smooth, orderly processes of change. In practice, however, energy transitions can be volatile and disjointed affairs, contested by a diverse cast of stakeholders with competing interests, and there is an everâpresent risk of mismatches between energy supply and demand.â
Risks include tensions over global trade as regions shift to clean energy at different rates and sharp drops in fossil fuel use destabilising countries that depend on income from their sale.
It also points to âfundamental changes in how power markets operateâ as wind and solar make up a rising share of the electricity mix. The contribution from these variable renewables reaches 68% of the global total by 2050 in the NZE â with even higher shares in some markets.
Dealing with these changes ârequir[es] policy makers to mobilise investment in all sources of flexibility in order to maintain electricity securityâ, the outlook says.
Physical risks: weather, sea level, water
Other issues include the physical risks from a changing climate, with the IEA noting recent events such as the damage to power lines and oil refineries during Hurricane Ida in August 2021.
It says that 13% of the worldâs coastal thermal power plants, 25% of onshore liquified natural gas (LNG) facilities and 10% of coastal oil refineries are âââalready are at risk of experiencing severe coastal floodsâ, adding: âThese levels of risk will increase as sea levels rise.â
Similarly, the IEA identifies risks to energy-related infrastructure as a result of rising water stress, with a third of existing thermal and nuclear power plants already subject to high water stress areas.
This is shown in the figure below, where thermal power plants (blue dots), nuclear power plants (purple triangles), refineries (green squares) and copper mines (blue diamonds) are mapped against water scarcity in 2020, with higher exposure indicated by darker shading.

Selected energy-related infrastructure (coloured points) and water stress levels in 2020 (shading) / Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2021.
The outlook adds: âBased on the projected water availability under the IPCC RCP 4.5 scenario (an intermediate emissions scenario), over 40% of freshwaterâcooled thermal and nuclear fleets are projected to be in high risk areas by 2040.â
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Simon Evans is the deputy editor and policy editor at Carbon Brief
This article is published under a CC license
