Investing in Energy: The changing face of global energy demand

14 January 2025

A range of sources continue to play a role in the world’s burgeoning energy needs. Therefore, it is important to be pragmatic when investing in energy companies to accommodate this changing mix, says Mark Hume, Co-Manager, BlackRock Energy and Resources Income Trust.

Energy is an input for almost all economic activity, and there has been a strong historic relationship between energy demand and economic growth.[1]

Rising demand for energy can continue to drive investment in new energy sources. Global energy investment was set to exceed USD 3 trillion for the first time in 2024.[2] The shape of this energy investment is shifting over time but is still balanced across a range of energy sources.

Investment is higher for clean energy vs fossil fuels – with USD 2,003bn3 of investment spread across the following; USD 771bn for renewable power, USD 452bn for grid and storage, USD 669bn in energy efficiency and end use. In particular, outside China, emerging market investment in renewables is very low, accounting for only around 15% of global clean energy spending.3,4

Electricity demand

There is also considerable variation in the sources of energy demand. Demand for electricity, for example, is rising at its fastest rate in years. Global electricity demand was forecasted to grow by around 4% in 2024, with growth around 4% again in 2025.3 Solar and wind power generation is expected to make up almost 75% of this increase in energy production.3 Renewable sources of electricity are forecast to rise from 30% in 2023 to 35% of global electricity supply in 2025.3

There are also additional sources of demand. AI, for example, is energy-intensive and growing fast. Goldman Sachs points out that a ChatGPT query requires nearly 10 times as much electricity to process as a Google search.[3] This has led to significant growth in data centres, which store and interrogate data to generate AI insights. These data centres currently consume 1-2% of overall global power, but this could rise to 3-4% by the end of the decade. 2

Nevertheless, there are bottlenecks in electricity production. Electricity grids need to be restructured to cope with demand. In the UK, for example, the ‘great grid upgrade’ started in July of 2024 but is projected to take six years to be completed.[4]

Fossil fuels continue to fill the gap, but demand is falling. Growth in world oil demand was forecast to slow sharply in 2024 and 2025, led by weaker demand from China.[5] The IEA says global demand for oil and gas is expected to peak by 2030. Among other energy options, global nuclear generation is on track to reach a new high in 2025.[6]

We aim to navigate this complex energy market by diversifying investments in various assets and sectors. As at 31 October 2024, we invested 40% in mining, over 30% in conventional energy companies and close to 30% in energy transition. We believe it is vital to be flexible in adapting to the changing energy complex over time.

[1] Energy for Growth Hub – How does energy impact economic growth? An overview of the evidence – 7 March 2023

[2] International Energy Agency – World Energy Investment 2024 – June 2024

[3] Goldman Sachs – AI is poised to drive 160% increase in data center power demand – 14 May 2024

[4] The Great Grid Update – Powering the things you love – May 2024

[5] Financial Times – IEA predicts sharp fall in growth of global demand for oil – 15 October 2024

[6] The Guardian – Nuclear power output expected to break global records in 2025 – 24 January 2024

 

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