January 22, 2020 | 6:46 pm By Bienvenido S.
Oplas, Jr.
Recently it was reported that the growth rate
of Germany, Europe’s largest economy and the world’s fourth largest, fell to
only 0.6% in 2019. This caught my attention because it is a significant drop
from 1.5% in 2018 and 2.2% average for 2014-2017. The UK and France managed to
grow 1.4% in Q1-Q3 2019 so far, while Italy has crawled to only 0.1% growth.
From 1998 to 2018, or
two decades, China, India, and South Korea have managed to expand their GDP
size from four to 13 times while others have expanded only by 2.3 times at
most. So we may ask, what are the “secrets” of China, India, and South Korea
for the big expansion of their GDP sizes?
There are a dozen plus
factors, but for this paper, I want to test the hypothesis that “stable,
cheaper energy is stable growth.” Thus, I will leave out other factors (rule of
law, property rights protection, global openness, lower taxes, etc.) for now.
First I checked the
consumption of fossil fuels coal and natural gas — stable, predictable,
dispatchable on demand — in power generation, units in million tonnes oil
equivalent (mtoe).
China, India, and South
Korea have indeed expanded their coal capacity by 2.4 times to 2.9 times while
the four Europeans and the US have decreased their coal consumption. But the US
has increased its already high consumption of natural gas while China and South
Korea have also expanded their gas use but not at the level of the US.
Then I checked their
consumption of intermittent, unstable, and non-dispatchable energy sources like
wind and solar. China, the US, and Germany are the world leaders, with India,
Japan, and the UK trying to catch up.
The total consumption
of wind and solar, despite their rapid expansion in recent years, remain very
small compared to use of coal and gas for many countries. For instance, the
wind and solar of China (123 mtoe), India (20.6 mtoe), and South Korea (2.6 mtoe)
in 2018 were only 6.4%, 2.8%, and 2.9% respectively of their coal consumption.
The US’ wind and solar (84.8 mtoe) in 2018 was only 12.1% of its natgas
consumption.
It is safe to say that
the reason why China, India, and South Korea have expanded their economies
faster than the other seven large economies is partly (or largely) because they
relied more on stable and cheaper fossil fuels especially coal, and never
relied on intermittent, unstable wind and solar in their continuing march
towards modernization and industrialization.
The US has escaped the
anemic growth pattern of the Europeans because it increased its reliance on
natgas, also a fossil fuel, even though its coal use has declined.
US President Donald
Trump is correct in his opening speech at the ongoing 50th World
Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, that US will pursue its energy
independence (and dominance) in fossil fuels and not be swayed by climate scare
and doom stories, and embrace the energy of low and anemic growth — wind and
solar and other variable renewables.
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