Press Release: World Energy Outlook 2019 Highlights Deep Disparities in the Global Energy System

Rapid and widespread changes across all parts of the energy system are needed to put the world on a path to a secure and sustainable energy future

Deep disparities define today’s energy world. The dissonance between well-supplied oil markets and growing geopolitical tensions and uncertainties. The gap between the ever-higher amounts of greenhouse gas emissions being produced and the insufficiency of stated policies to curb those emissions in line with international climate targets. The gap between the promise of energy for all and the lack of electricity access for 850 million people around the world.

The World Energy Outlook 2019, the International Energy Agency’s flagship publication, explores these widening fractures in detail. It explains the impact of today’s decisions on tomorrow’s energy systems, and describes a pathway that enables the world to meet climate, energy access and air quality goals while maintaining a strong focus on the reliability and affordability of energy for a growing global population.

As ever, decisions made by governments remain critical for the future of the energy system. This is evident in the divergences between WEO scenarios that map out different routes the world could follow over the coming decades, depending on the policies, investments, technologies and other choices that decision makers pursue today. Together, these scenarios seek to address a fundamental issue – how to get from where we are now to where we want to go.

The path the world is on right now is shown by the Current Policies Scenario, which provides a baseline picture of how global energy systems would evolve if governments make no changes to their existing policies. In this scenario, energy demand rises by 1.3% a year to 2040, resulting in strains across all aspects of energy markets and a continued strong upward march in energy-related emissions.

The Stated Policies Scenario, formerly known as the New Policies Scenario, incorporates today’s policy intentions and targets in addition to existing measures. The aim is to hold up a mirror to today’s plans and illustrate their consequences. The future outlined in this scenario is still well off track from the aim of a secure and sustainable energy future. It describes a world in 2040 where hundreds of millions of people still go without access to electricity, where pollution-related premature deaths remain around today’s elevated levels, and where CO2 emissions would lock in severe impacts from climate change.

The Sustainable Development Scenario indicates what needs to be done differently to fully achieve climate and other energy goals that policy makers around the world have set themselves. Achieving this scenario – a path fully aligned with the Paris Agreement aim of holding the rise in global temperatures to well below 2°C and pursuing efforts to limit it to 1.5°C – requires rapid and widespread changes across all parts of the energy system. Sharp emission cuts are achieved thanks to multiple fuels and technologies providing efficient and cost-effective energy services for all.

“What comes through with crystal clarity in this year’s World Energy Outlook is there is no single or simple solution to transforming global energy systems,” said Dr. Fatih Birol, the IEA’s Executive Director. “Many technologies and fuels have a part to play across all sectors of the economy. For this to happen, we need strong leadership from policy makers, as governments hold the clearest responsibility to act and have the greatest scope to shape the future.”

In the Stated Policies Scenario, energy demand increases by 1% per year to 2040. Low-carbon sources, led by solar PV, supply more than half of this growth, and natural gas accounts for another third. Oil demand flattens out in the 2030s, and coal use edges lower. Some parts of the energy sector, led by electricity, undergo rapid transformations. Some countries, notably those with “net zero” aspirations, go far in reshaping all aspects of their supply and consumption.

However, the momentum behind clean energy is insufficient to offset the effects of an expanding global economy and growing population. The rise in emissions slows but does not peak before 2040.

Shale output from the United States is set to stay higher for longer than previously projected, reshaping global markets, trade flows and security. In the Stated Policies Scenario, annual U.S. production growth slows from the breakneck pace seen in recent years, but the United States still accounts for 85% of the increase in global oil production to 2030, and for 30% of the increase in gas. By 2025, total U.S. shale output (oil and gas) overtakes total oil and gas production from Russia.

“The shale revolution highlights that rapid change in the energy system is possible when an initial push to develop new technologies is complemented by strong market incentives and large-scale investment,” said Dr. Birol. “The effects have been striking, with U.S. shale now acting as a strong counterweight to efforts to manage oil markets.”

The higher U.S. output pushes down the share of OPEC members and Russia in total oil production, which drops to 47% in 2030, from 55% in the mid-2000s. But whichever pathway the energy system follows, the world is set to rely heavily on oil supply from the Middle East for years to come.

Alongside the immense task of putting emissions on a sustainable trajectory, energy security remains paramount for governments around the globe. Traditional risks have not gone away, and new hazards such as cybersecurity and extreme weather require constant vigilance. Meanwhile, the continued transformation of the electricity sector requires policy makers to move fast to keep pace with technological change and the rising need for the flexible operation of power systems.

“The world urgently needs to put a laser-like focus on bringing down global emissions. This calls for a grand coalition encompassing governments, investors, companies and everyone else who is committed to tackling climate change,” said Dr. Birol. “Our Sustainable Development Scenario is tailor-made to help guide the members of such a coalition in their efforts to address the massive climate challenge that faces us all.”

A sharp pick-up in energy efficiency improvements is the element that does the most to bring the world towards the Sustainable Development Scenario. Right now, efficiency improvements are slowing: the 1.2% rate in 2018 is around half the average seen since 2010 and remains far below the 3% rate that would be needed.

Electricity is one of the few energy sources that sees rising consumption over the next two decades in the Sustainable Development Scenario. Electricity’s share of final consumption overtakes that of oil, today’s leader, by 2040. Wind and solar PV provide almost all the increase in electricity generation.

Putting electricity systems on a sustainable path will require more than just adding more renewables. The world also needs to focus on the emissions that are “locked in” to existing systems. Over the past 20 years, Asia has accounted for 90% of all coal-fired capacity built worldwide, and these plants potentially have long operational lifetimes ahead of them. This year’s WEO considers three options to bring down emissions from the existing global coal fleet: to retrofit plants with carbon capture, utilisation and storage or biomass co-firing equipment; to repurpose them to focus on providing system adequacy and flexibility; or to retire them earlier.

Access the 2019 World Energy Outlook report.

About the IEA: The International Energy Agency, the global energy authority, was founded in 1974 to help its member countries co-ordinate a collective response to major oil supply disruptions. Its mission has evolved and rests today on three main pillars: working to ensure global energy security; expanding energy cooperation and dialogue around the world; and promoting an environmentally sustainable energy future.

International Energy Agency Press Office
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Short-Term Energy Outlook

U.S. Energy Information Administration
November 13, 2019 Release

Highlights

Global liquid fuels
  • Brent crude oil spot prices averaged $60 per barrel (b) in October, down $3/b from September and down $21/b from October 2018. EIA forecasts Brent spot prices will average $60/b in 2020, down from a 2019 average of $64/b. EIA forecasts that West Texas Intermediate (WTI) prices will average $5.50/b less than Brent prices in 2020. EIA expects crude oil prices will be lower on average in 2020 than in 2019 because of forecast rising global oil inventories, particularly in the first half of next year.
  • Based on preliminary data and model estimates, EIA estimates that the United States exported 140,000 b/d more total crude oil and petroleum products in September than it imported; total exports exceeded imports by 550,000 b/d in October. If confirmed in survey-collected monthly data, it would be the first time the United States exported more petroleum than it imported since EIA records began in 1949. EIA expects total crude oil and petroleum net exports to average 750,000 b/d in 2020 compared with average net imports of 520,000 b/d in 2019.
  • Distillate fuel inventories (a category that includes home heating oil) in the U.S. East Coast—Petroleum Administration for Defense District (PADD 1)—totaled 36.6 million barrels at the end of October, which was 30% lower than the five-year (2014–18) average for the end of October. The declining inventories largely reflect low U.S. refinery runs during October and low distillate fuel imports to the East Coast. EIA does not forecast regional distillate prices, but low inventories could put upward pressure on East Coast distillate fuel prices, including home heating oil, in the coming weeks.
  • U.S. regular gasoline retail prices averaged $2.63 per gallon (gal) in October, up 3 cents/gal from September and 11 cents/gal higher than forecast in last month’s STEO. Average U.S. regular gasoline retail prices were higher than expected, in large part, because of ongoing issues from refinery outages in California. EIA forecasts that regular gasoline prices on the West Coast (PADD 5), a region that includes California, will fall as the issues begin to resolve. EIA expects that prices in the region will average $3.44/gal in November and $3.12/gal in December. For the U.S. national average, EIA expects regular gasoline retail prices to average $2.65/gal in November and fall to $2.50/gal in December. EIA forecasts that the annual average price in 2020 will be $2.62/gal.
  • Despite low distillate fuel inventories, EIA expects that average household expenditures for home heating oil will decrease this winter. This forecast largely reflects warmer temperatures than last winter for the entire October–March period, and retail heating oil prices are expected to be unchanged compared with last winter. For households that heat with propane, EIA forecasts that expenditures will fall by 15% from last winter because of milder temperatures and lower propane prices.
Natural gas
  • Natural gas storage injections in the United States outpaced the previous five-year (2014–18) average during the 2019 injection season as a result of rising natural gas production. At the beginning of April, when the injection season started, working inventories were 28% lower than the five-year average for the same period. By October 31, U.S. total working gas inventories reached 3,762 billion cubic feet (Bcf), which was 1% higher than the five-year average and 16% higher than a year ago.
  • EIA expects natural gas storage withdrawals to total 1.9 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) between the end of October and the end of March, which is less than the previous five-year average winter withdrawal. A withdrawal of this amount would leave end-of-March inventories at almost 1.9 Tcf, 9% higher than the five-year average.
  • The Henry Hub natural gas spot price averaged $2.33 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in October, down 23 cents/MMBtu from September. The decline largely reflected strong inventory injections. However, forecast cold temperatures across much of the country caused prices to rise in early November, and EIA forecasts Henry Hub prices to average $2.73/MMBtu for the final two months of 2019. EIA forecasts Henry Hub spot prices to average $2.48/MMBtu in 2020, down 13 cents/MMBtu from the 2019 average. Lower forecast prices in 2020 reflect a decline in U.S. natural gas demand and slowing U.S. natural gas export growth, allowing inventories to remain higher than the five-year average during the year even as natural gas production growth is forecast to slow. 
  • EIA forecasts that annual U.S. dry natural gas production will average 92.1 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) in 2019, up 10% from 2018. EIA expects that natural gas production will grow much less in 2020 because of the lag between changes in price and changes in future drilling activity, with low prices in the third quarter of 2019 reducing natural gas-directed drilling in the first half of 2020. EIA forecasts natural gas production in 2020 will average 94.9 Bcf/d.
  • EIA expects U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports to average 4.7 Bcf/d in 2019 and 6.4 Bcf/d in 2020 as three new liquefaction projects come online. In 2019, three new liquefaction facilities—Cameron LNG, Freeport LNG, and Elba Island LNG—commissioned their first trains. Natural gas deliveries to LNG projects set a new record in July, averaging 6.0 Bcf/d, and increased further to 6.6 Bcf/d in October, when new trains at Cameron and Freeport began ramping up. Cameron LNG exported its first cargo in May, Corpus Christi LNG’s newly commissioned Train 2 in July, and Freeport in September. Elba Island plans to ship its first export cargo by the end of this year. In 2020, Cameron, Freeport, and Elba Island expect to place their remaining trains in service, bringing the total U.S. LNG export capacity to 8.9 Bcf/d by the end of the year.
Electricity, coal, renewables, and emissions
  • EIA expects the share of U.S. total utility-scale electricity generation from natural gas-fired power plants will rise from 34% in 2018 to 37% in 2019 and to 38% in 2020. EIA forecasts the share of U.S. electric generation from coal to average 25% in 2019 and 22% in 2020, down from 28% in 2018. EIA’s forecast nuclear share of U.S. generation remains at about 20% in 2019 and in 2020. Hydropower averages a 7% share of total U.S. generation in the forecast for 2019 and 2020, down from almost 8% in 2018. Wind, solar, and other non-hydropower renewables provided 9% of U.S. total utility-scale generation in 2018. EIA expects they will provide 10% in 2019 and 12% in 2020.
  • EIA expects total U.S. coal production in 2019 to total 698 million short tons (MMst), an 8% decrease from the 2018 level of 756 MMst. The decline reflects lower demand for coal in the U.S. electric power sector and reduced competitiveness of U.S. exports in the global market. EIA expects U.S. steam coal exports to face increasing competition from Eastern European sources, and that Russia will fill a growing share of steam coal trade, causing U.S. coal exports to fall in 2020. EIA forecasts that coal production in 2020 will total 607 MMst.
  • EIA expects U.S. electric power sector generation from renewables other than hydropower—principally wind and solar—to grow from 408 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) in 2019 to 466 billion kWh in 2020. In EIA’s forecast, Texas accounts for 19% of the U.S. non-hydropower renewables generation in 2019 and 22% in 2020. California’s forecast share of non-hydropower renewables generation falls from 15% in 2019 to 14% in 2020. EIA expects that the Midwest and Central power regions will see shares in the 16% to 18% range for 2019 and 2020.
  • EIA forecasts that, after rising by 2.7% in 2018, U.S. energy-related carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions will decline by 1.7% in 2019 and by 2.0% in 2020, partially as a result of lower forecast energy consumption. In 2019, EIA forecasts less demand for space cooling because of cooler summer months; an expected 5% decline in cooling degree days from 2018, when it was significantly higher than the previous 10-year (2008–17) average. In addition, EIA also expects U.S. CO2 emissions in 2019 to decline because the forecast share of electricity generated from natural gas and renewables will increase, and the share generated from coal, which is a more carbon-intensive energy source, will decrease.

Emerging Markets: Trade Wars Send Manufacturers Scurrying Back Home…

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American Geophysical Union Data for All Students

AGU Publications – Global Change Alert

Impact of Distinct Origin Locations on the Life Cycles of Landfalling Atmospheric Rivers over the U.S. West Coast
Yang Zhou, and Hyemi Kim
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres | First published: 05 November 2019

The amplified Arctic warming in the recent decades may have been overestimated by CMIP5 models
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Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 03 November 2019

Subtropical marine low stratiform cloud deck spatial errors in the E3SMv1 Atmosphere Model
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Intermittency in wind‐driven surface alteration on Mars interpreted from wind streaks and measurements by InSight
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Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 03 November 2019

Biologically‐Relevant Trends in Springtime Temperatures Across the United States
Theresa M. Crimmins, and Michael A. Crimmins
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 06 November 2019

Flow and Sediment Flux Asymmetry in a Branching Channel Delta
W. Wagner, and D. Mohrig
Water Resources Research | First published: 06 November 2019

Delayed and sustained remote triggering of Small Earthquakes in the San Jacinto Fault Region by the 2014 Mw 7.2 Papanoa, Mexico Earthquake
Bo Li, Abhijit Ghosh, and Manuel M. Mendoza
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 06 November 2019

Hydropower flushing events cause severe loss of macrozoobenthos in Alpine streams
C. Gabbud, M. Bakker, M. Clémençon, and S.N. Lane
Water Resources Research | First published: 06 November 2019

Interdecadal variation of Indian Ocean basin mode and the impact on Asian summer climate
Bo Sun, Huixin Li, and Botao Zhou
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 06 November 2019

Dynamic controls on field‐scale soil nitrous oxide hot spots and hot moments across a microtopographic gradient
Alexander H. Krichels, and Wendy H. Yang
Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences | First published: 06 November 2019

Global attribution of runoff variance across multiple timescales
Jianyu Liu, Qiang Zhang, Shuyun Feng, Xihui Gu, Vijay P. Singh, and Peng Sun
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres | First published: 06 November 2019

Links of Extracellular Enzyme Activities, Microbial Metabolism and Community Composition in the River‐impacted Coastal Waters
Zhen Shi, Jie Xu, Xiangfu Li, Ruihuan Li, and Qian Li
Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences | First published: 06 November 2019

Analysis of Bent Wire Antenna Resonant Frequency for Different Bent Angles
J. Suganya, Umberto Sciacca, James A. Baskaradas, and Achille Zirizzotti
Radio Science | First published: 06 November 2019

Export Flux, Biogeochemical Effects, and the Fate of a Terrestrial Carbonate System: From Changjiang (Yangtze River) Estuary to the East China Sea
Tian‐qi Xiong, Peng‐fei Liu, Wei‐dong Zhai, Yan Bai, Dong Liu, Di Qi, Nan Zheng, Jin‐wen Liu, Xiang‐hui Guo, Tian‐yu Cheng, Hai‐xia Zhang, Song‐yin Wang, Xian‐qiang He, Jian‐fang Chen, and Ru Li
Earth and Space Science | First published: 08 November 2019

Solar Irradiance Variability: Comparisons of Models and Measurements
O. Coddington, J. Lean, P. Pilewskie, M. Snow, E. Richard, G. Kopp, C. Lindholm, M. DeLand, S. Marchenko, M. Haberreiter, and T. Baranyi
Earth and Space Science | First published: 08 November 2019

Extracting the critical rooting length in plant uprooting by flow from pullout experiments
Valentina Bau, Simone Zen, Giulio Calvani, and Paolo Perona
Water Resources Research | First published: 09 November 2019

Contributions of extreme and non‐extreme precipitation to California precipitation seasonality changes under warming
Lu Dong, L. Ruby Leung, Jian Lu, and Yang Gao
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Adjustment of Radar–Gauge Rainfall Discrepancy Due to Raindrop Drift and Evaporation Using the Weather Research and Forecasting Model and Dual‐Polarization Radar
Qiang Dai, Qiqi Yang, Dawei Han, Miguel A. Rico‐Ramirez, and Shuliang Zhang
Water Resources Research | First published: 08 November 2019

Quantifying the timescale and strength of Southern Hemisphere intra‐seasonal stratosphere‐troposphere coupling
Elena Saggioro, and Theodore G. Shepherd Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Diurnal Cycle of IMERG V06 Precipitation
Jackson Tan, George J. Huffman, David T. Bolvin, and Eric J. Nelkin
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Impact Degassing of H2 on Early Mars and Its Effect on the Climate System
Robert M. Haberle, Kevin Zahnle, Nadine G. Barlow, and Kathryn E. Steakley
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Overview of the GF‐7 Laser Altimeter System Mission
Xinming Tang, Junfeng Xie, Ren Liu, Genghua Huang, Chenguang Zhao, Ying Zhen, Hongzhao Tang, and Xianhui Dou
Earth and Space Science | First published: 08 November 2019

The DOE E3SM coupled model version 1: Description and results at high resolution
Peter M. Caldwell, Azamat Mametjanov, Qi Tang, Luke P. Van Roekel, Jean‐Christophe Golaz, Wuyin Lin, David C. Bader, Noel D. Keen, Yan Feng, Robert Jacob, Mathew E. Maltrud, Andrew F. Roberts, Mark A. Taylor, Milena Veneziani, Hailong Wang, Jonathan D. Wolfe, Karthik Balaguru, Philip Cameron‐Smith, Lu Dong, Stephen A. Klein, L. Ruby Leung, Hong‐Yi Li, Qing Li, Xiaohong Liu, Richard B. Neale, Marielle Pinheiro, Yun Qian, Paul A. Ullrich, Shaocheng Xie, Yang Yang, Yuying Zhang, Kai Zhang, and Tian Zhou
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | First published: 08 November 2019

Integrate risk from climate change in China under global warming of 1.5°C and 2.0°C
Shaohong Wu, Lulu Liu, Jiangbo Gao, and Wentao Wang
Earth’s Future | First published: 09 November 2019

Size of the atmospheric blocking events: Scaling law and response to climate change
Ebrahim Nabizadeh, Pedram Hassanzadeh, Da Yang, and Elizabeth A. Barnes
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Data‐driven modeling of the distribution of diazotrophs in the global ocean
Weiyi Tang, and Nicolas Cassar
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Seasonal variation in sediment delivery across the bay marsh interface of an estuarine salt marsh
Jessica R. Lacy, Madeline R. Foster‐Martinez, Rachel M. Allen, Matthew C. Ferner, and John C. Callaway
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans | First published: 08 November 2019

Precessional drivers of late Miocene Mediterranean sedimentary sequences: African summer monsoon and Atlantic winter storm tracks
Alice Marzocchi, Rachel Flecker, Daniel J. Lunt, Wout Krijgsman, and Frits J. Hilgen
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology | First published: 09 November 2019

Sensitivity of Land Precipitation to Surface Evapotranspiration: A Nonlocal Perspective Based on Water Vapor Transport
Jiangfeng Wei, and Paul A. Dirmeyer
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Prediction of Dansgaard‐Oeschger events from Greenland dust records
Johannes Lohmann
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Reassessing the value of regional climate modelling using palaeoclimate simulations
Edward Armstrong, Peter O. Hopcroft, and Paul Valdes
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Inter‐model spread in the Northern Hemisphere stratospheric polar vortex response to climate change in the CMIP5 models
Yutian Wu, Isla R. Simpson, and Richard Seager
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Unprecedented Northern Hemisphere tropical cyclone genesis in 2018 shaped by subtropical warming in the North Pacific and the North Atlantic
Chao Wang, Bin Wang, and Jian Cao
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Analysis of ocean tide induced magnetic fields derived from oceanic in‐situ observations — climate trends and the remarkable sensitivity of shelf regions
Johannes Petereit, Jan Saynisch, Christopher Irrgang, and Maik Thomas
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans | First published: 08 November 2019

Strain Rate‐Dependent Hardening‐Softening Characteristics of Gas Hydrate‐Bearing Sediments
C. Deusner, S. Gupta, X.‐G. Xie, Y. F. Leung, S. Uchida, E. Kossel, and M. Haeckel
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems | First published: 08 November 2019

Dr. Robert C. Thunell: A 40‐Year Career of Outstanding Science, Service, and Education in Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
K. Tedesco, E. Tappa, C. Benitez‐Nelson, D. Black, B. Christensen, B. Corliss, M. Goni, L. Lorenzoni, M. McConnell, E. Osborne, C. Pride, L. Sautter, and N. Umling
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology | First published: 08 November 2019

Looking up or looking down? Hydrologic and atmospheric perspectives on precipitation and evaporation variability
Jun Yin, and Amilcare Porporato
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Virtual tide gauges for predicting relative sea level rise
Rhys Hawkins, Laurent Husson, Gaël Choblet, Thomas Bodin, and Julia Pfeffer
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth | First published: 09 November 2019

Increasing water vapor in the stratosphere and mesosphere after 2002
Jia Yue, James Russell, Quan Gan, Tao Wang, Pingping Rong, Rolando Garcia, and Martin Mlynczak
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 09 November 2019

Impact of Interactive Vertical Overlap of Cumulus and Stratus on Global Aerosol, Precipitation, and Radiation Processes in the Seoul National University Atmosphere Model Version 0 with a Unified Convection Scheme (SAM0‐UNICON)
Sungsu Park, Eunsil Oh, Siyun Kim, and Jihoon Shin
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | First published: 08 November 2019

Through the Thick and Thin: New Constraints on Mars Paleopressure History 3.8 – 4 Ga from Small Exhumed Craters
A. O. Warren, E. S. Kite, J.‐P. Williams, and B. Horgan
Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets | First published: 06 November 2019

Morphodynamic Modeling of Sediment Pulse Dynamics
Jacob A. Morgan, and Peter A. Nelson
Water Resources Research | First published: 06 November 2019

Investigations of Aerobic Methane Oxidation in Two Marine Seep Environments Part 2: Isotopic Kinetics
E.W. Chan, A.M. Shiller, D.J. Joung, E.C. Arrington, D.L. Valentine, M.C. Redmond, J.A. Breier, S.A. Socolofsky, and J.D. Kessler
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans | First published: 07 November 2019

Quantifying the effects of nutrient enrichment and freshwater mixing on coastal ocean acidification
Jennie E. Rheuban, Scott C. Doney, Daniel C. McCorkle, and Rachel W. Jakuba
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans | First published: 07 November 2019

Effects of Biomass Burning on Stratocumulus Droplet Characteristics, Drizzle Rate, and Composition
Ali Hossein Mardi, Hossein Dadashazar, Alexander B. MacDonald, Ewan Crosbie, Matthew M. Coggon, Mojtaba Azadi Aghdam, Roy K. Woods, Haflidi H. Jonsson, Richard C. Flagan, John H. Seinfeld, and Armin Sorooshian
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres | First published: 07 November 2019

Impact of inorganic particles of sedimentary origin on global dissolved iron and phytoplankton distribution
H. Beghoura, T. Gorgues, O. Aumont, H.F. Planquette, A. Tagliabue, and P.‐A. Auger
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans | First published: 07 November 2019

The Impact of Ship Emission Controls Recorded by Cloud Properties
Edward Gryspeerdt, Tristan W. P. Smith, Eoin O’Keeffe, Matthew W. Christensen, and Fraser W. Goldsworth
Geophysical Research Letters | First published: 05 November 2019

Enhanced snow absorption and albedo reduction by dust‐snow internal mixing: modeling and parameterization
Cenlin He, Kuo‐Nan Liou, Yoshi Takano, Fei Chen, and Michael Barlage
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | First published: 07 November 2019

Response of humic acids and soil organic matter to vegetation replacement in subtropical high mountain forests
Hsueh‐Ching Wang, Guanglong Tian, Chiou‐Pin Chen, Ed‐Haun Chang, Chiao‐Ying Chou, Chyi‐Rong Chiou, and Chih‐Yu Chiu
Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences | First published: 07 November 2019

Seasonal variations of Arctic low‐level clouds and its linkage to sea ice seasonal variations
Yueyue Yu, Patrick C. Taylor, and Ming Cai
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres | First published: 07 November 2019

Microbial processing of sediment‐derived dissolved organic matter: Implications for its subsequent biogeochemical cycling in overlying seawater
Ruanhong Cai, Wenchu Zhou, Chen He, Kai Tang, Weidong Guo, Quan Shi, Michael Gonsior, and Nianzhi Jiao
Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences | First published: 07 November 2019

Partly cloudy with a chance of lava flows: forecasting volcanic eruptions in the 21st century
Michael Poland, and Kyle R. Anderson
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth | First published: 07 November 2019

Response of convective boundary layer and shallow cumulus to soil moisture heterogeneity: A large‐eddy simulation study
Cunbo Han, Slavko Brdar, and Stefan Kollet
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | First published: 07 November 2019

Identification of Source‐water Oxygen isotopes in trees Toolkit (ISO‐Tool) for deciphering historical water use by forest trees
Christopher I. Sargeant, Michael Bliss Singer, and Christine Vallet‐Coulomb
Water Resources Research | First published: 08 November 2019

Mid‐latitude southern hemisphere temperature change at the end of the Eocene greenhouse shortly before dawn of the Oligocene icehouse
A.M. Haiblen, B.N. Opdyke, A.P. Roberts, D. Heslop, and P.A. Wilson
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology | First published: 08 November 2019

India-Watching for All Students

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Climate Change and the Fed

Speech by Governor Brainard on why climate change matters for monetary policy and financial stability.

At “The Economics of Climate Change” a research conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, San Francisco, California.

Released by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Visit them on the web at Federal Reserve Board.

Japan-Watching Business Conditions

Indexes of Business Conditions September 2019 Preliminary Release JAPAN

[“What’s New” E-mail Service] from ESRI, CAO, Japan

Indexes of Business Conditions September 2019 Preliminary Release” was released at 14:00 (JST) on Nov. 8.

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Data Students Should Follow

The Weekly Coal Production report has been updated for the week ending November 2, 2019.

  • Estimated U.S. coal production totaled about 12.6 million short tons (MMst)
  • This production estimate is 0.6% lower than last week’s estimate and 16.6% lower than the production estimate in the comparable week in 2018
  • East of the Mississippi River coal production totaled 5.3 MMst
  • West of the Mississippi River coal production totaled 7.3 MMst
  • U.S. year-to-date coal production totaled 598.3 MMst, 5.7% lower than the comparable year-to-date coal production in 2018

For more information, read the report.

Contact:
Fadi Shadid
202-586-6393
Email to: fadi.shadid@eia.gov

(U.S. Energy Information Administration, The Weekly Coal Production report: November 7, 2019)

Info Students Should Know

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)

BEA News:  Gross Domestic Product by State, Second Quarter 2019

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has issued the following news release today:

Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased in all 50 states and the District of Columbia in the second quarter of 2019. The percent change in real GDP in the second quarter ranged from 4.7 percent in Texas to 0.5 percent in Hawaii.

The full text of the release [archived PDF] on BEA’s website can be found here.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis provides this service to you at no charge. Visit us on the Web at www.bea.gov.  All you will need is your e-mail address.  If you have questions or need assistance, please e-mail subscribe@bea.gov.

Japan-Watching Made Simple

Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry E-mail Service (2019/11/6) JAPAN

Wed 11/6/2019 3:30 AM

Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry

This e-mail is a free service to inform you about new information on the METI Home Page.

On November 6, the following information was added:

[Press Releases]

FIT-Based Contracts between Household Consumers and Electricity Companies Start to Expire Sequentially [archived PDF]

Decision on Cabinet Order for Stipulating the Enforcement Date of Partial Revision of the Patent Act, etc. [archived PDF]

The 32nd Tokyo International Film Festival to be Held [archived PDF]

METI Parliamentary Vice-Minister Miyamoto Visits Slovakia and France [archived PDF]

The Inaugural TCFD Summit Held in Japan [archived PDF]

——–Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry——–