The Geopolitical Accelerator: BP Shows How Conflict Drives Domestic Fossil Fuels

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Global geopolitical conflict is acting as an unintended accelerator for domestic fossil fuel use, slowing the necessary international energy transition, according to BP’s latest annual outlook. The energy major has raised its long-term oil and gas demand forecasts, concluding that the 2050 net-zero target is unlikely.
BP’s revised figures indicate a persistent reliance on hydrocarbons. Oil consumption in 2050 is now projected to hit 83 million barrels per day (b/d), an 8% increase from the previous 77 million b/d estimate. Natural gas demand is similarly forecast to remain elevated at 4,806 billion cubic meters annually in 2050. Furthermore, BP has delayed the expected date of peak oil demand by five years, now projecting 103 million b/d in 2030.
BP’s chief economist attributes the slowdown to conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, alongside rising trade tariffs, which intensify national demands for domestic energy supplies. This focus on self-sufficiency strongly incentivizes nations to maximize domestically produced fossil fuels over imported alternatives, even as it creates an incentive for some countries to accelerate towards low-carbon ‘electrostates.’
The report warns that the current slow pace has severe climate implications. BP’s modeling shows that the world is on a trajectory to breach the cumulative 2∘C carbon budget limit by the early 2040s. The company cautions that this extended delay significantly increases the economic and social costs required for future climate mitigation. To meet the 2050 net-zero goal, oil demand must drop aggressively to about 35 million b/d by that date.
Despite the rapid expansion of renewables—projected to meet over 80% of new electricity demand by 2035—oil will remain the largest single source of primary global energy supply, holding a 30% share in 2035. Renewables are set to rise from 10% to 15% of the primary energy supply by 2035 but are not expected to surpass oil’s market share until the late 2040s.

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