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Your Search Result for "symposium"

IEA-IEF-OPEC Gas and Coal Market Outlook Symposium
IEA-IEF-OPEC Gas and Coal Market Outlook Symposium, 4 October 2012, IEA, Paris
Third IEA-IEF-OPEC Symposium on Energy Outlooks
The IEA and OPEC regularly publish energy and oil outlooks covering the short-, medium- and long-term. In addition, on the occasion of the International Energy Forum, each organisation contributes by submitting a focused energy analysis to be presented to IEF Ministers
2nd CCS Symposium
The IEF and the Global CCS Institute held a Second Symposium on CCS development and deployment, supported by the government of Algeria.
IEA-IEF-OPEC Symposium on Energy Outlooks
The IEA, IEF and OPEC held a symposium on "Energy Outlooks" in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on January 24th, 2011.
Extraordinary IEF Ministerial Meeting
The historic Extraordinary IEF Ministerial Meeting on 22 February 2011 in Riyadh, under the patronage of the Custodian of The Two Holy Mosques, King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, marked a new era of international energy cooperation.
IEF - Symposium
The International Energy Forum Secretariat held, under the auspices of the Ministry of Energy and Industry of Qatar, a symposium on tackling the human resource crunch in the petroleum industry. The symposium took place on 13-14 April 2009, in Doha, Qatar.
IEF-IFP Technology Symposium
The International Energy Forum Secretariat held, in cooperation with IFP of France, a symposium on the role of technology in the petroleum sector in enhancing global energy security. The symposium took place on 15 December 2008 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Press Release - IEA, IEF, OPEC Symposium on Energy Outlooks
The IEA, IEF and OPEC jointly hosted a symposium on Energy Outlooks in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on January 24th, 2011
Human Resources Symposium - Doha, Qatar, 13-14 April 2009
IEF Newsletter The skilled personnel shortage in the petroleum industry was one of the causes behind cost escalation in the oil and gas industry in recent years. It was also identified as one of the factors delaying capacity expansion and other project plans. Perceptions of the industry as a “sunset” sector, misconceptions about its approach to environmental concerns and competition from other high-tech industries have, combined with cutbacks in technical programmes in universities, helped to reduce the in-flow of skilled staff to the working population.
Third IEA-IEF-OPEC Symposium on Energy Outlooks
The IEA and OPEC regularly publish energy and oil outlooks covering the short-, medium- and long-term. In addition, on the occasion of the International Energy Forum, each organisation contributes by submitting a focused energy analysis to be presented to IEF Ministers. Short- to long-term energy outlooks are also published by other government, consultancy, banking and academic institutions.

Dialogue Insights

  • Gas is far from being just a bridging fuel. Gas is here to stay.
  • An integrated global gas market is not likely in the near term.
  • The three main gas regions (North America, Europe, & Asia) will keep their own fundamentals for some time.
  • The regionalisation of gas markets does not imply lower interdependence.
  • In the US, cheap gas displaced coal but in Europe cheap US coal has displaced gas.
  • The energy mix in one region depends on the energy mix in another.
  • In North America, UK, & increasingly Europe, gas trading at hubs provides liquid & transparent pricing data.
  • In the US, deregulation & financialisation of the gas market helped establish a price based on fundamentals.
  • The logic for establishing an Asian gas-pricing hub is questionable as the number of buyers & sellers is small.
  • Demand for natural gas in the coming decades is projected to come mainly from non-OECD countries.
  • Prospects for natural gas consumption are still tied to its applications as much as to its relative price.
  • Gas usage depends heavily on an anchor technology, such as electricity generation.
  • Markets remain interconnected and interdependent, despite the recent "re-regionalisation" of gas markets.
  • More dialogue is required to analyse possible changes to the structure of gas contracts.
  • Long-term contracts help ensure security of supply & demand, but there is room to incorporate market signals.
  • Policymakers must balance short-term mandates with long-term goals for the nations they represent.
  • Most stakeholders and market actors do not grasp the degree to which renewables need gas as a backup.
  • Industry and government should work together to address "herd mentalities" regarding entering new markets.
  • Future gas demand levels for transportation remain a "known unknown".
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