以下文章摘自麦肯锡季刊 Curbing the growth of global energy demand The opportunities for improvement are huge, but market forces alone won’t realize them. The options available to mitigate the world’s energy problems disconcert policy makers and executives alike. Securing new supplies of fossil fuels is difficult and often presents geopolitical risks; new technologies associated with alternative sources of energy, although attractive, involve significant levels of uncertainty and could have unintended consequences.1 Meanwhile, the prospect of reducing energy demand evokes fears that the consumer’s convenience and comfort would be compromised—an unattractive proposition anywhere and an unacceptable one in the developing world, where globalization and rapid economic growth, fueled by increased energy consumption, are improving the prospects of hundreds of millions of people. Yet McKinsey research shows that the growth of worldwide energy demand can be cut in half or more over the next 15 years, without reducing the benefits that energy’s end users enjoy—and while supporting economic growth. The key is a concerted global effort to boost energy productivity (the amount of output achieved from each unit of energy consumed).2 (A joint research project conducted by the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) and McKinsey’s global energy and materials practice. For the full report underlying this article, see Curbing Global Energy Demand Growth: The Energy Productivity Opportunity, May 2007, available free of charge online.) The exhibits that follow examine these opportunities by focusing on four sectors that represent 98 percent of end-use demand for energy around the world. Capturing the full range of these opportunities would improve global energy productivity by 135 quadrillion British thermal units (QBTUs), saving the equivalent of 64 million barrels of oil a day—almost 150 percent of the energy the United States consumes now. What’s more, an intensive focus on improving energy productivity would spur new markets for demand-side innovation and thus generate important business opportunities for manufacturers, utilities, and other companies. Yet market forces alone will not produce such outcomes. The obstacles that thwart improvements in energy productivity include information gaps, market-distorting subsidies, an inadequate financing infrastructure, and misaligned incentives. To overcome such barriers, policy makers must terminate distorted policies, make the price and use of energy more transparent, create new market-clearing and financing mechanisms, and selectively implement demand-side energy policies (such as new building codes and appliance standards) while also encouraging demandside innovation by companies. Although these actions will be difficult politically, the rewards would be profound. Capturing the opportunities we have identified would not only cut the growth of energy demand dramatically but also be among the most economically attractive ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. |