The EV impact on oil consumption
As the world moves towards the electrification of the
transportation sector, demand for oil will be replaced by demand for
electricity.
How much oil do electric vehicles save?
A standard combustion engine passenger vehicle in the
U.S. uses about 11 barrels of oil equivalent (BOE)
per year. A motorcycle uses 1, a Class 8 truck about 24, and a bus uses more
than 258 BOEs per year.
When these vehicles become electrified, the oil their combustion engine counterparts
would have used is no longer needed, displacing oil demand with electricity.
Since 2015, two and three-wheeled vehicles, such as
mopeds, scooters, and motorcycles, have accounted for most of the oil saved
from EVs on a global scale. With a wide adoption in Asia specifically, these
vehicles displaced the demand for almost 675,000 barrels of oil per day in
2015. By 2021, this number had quickly grown to 1 million
barrels per day.
Let’s take a look at the daily displacement of oil
demand by EV segment.
Today, while work is being done
in the commercial vehicle segment, very few large trucks on the road are
electric—however, this is expected to change by 2025.
Meanwile, electric
passenger vehicles have shown the biggest growth in adoption since 2015.
In 2022, the electric car market
experienced exponential growth, with sales exceeding 10 million cars. The
market is expected to continue its strong growth throughout 2023 and beyond,
eventually coming to save a predicted 886,700 barrels of oil per
day in 2025.
From gas to electric
While the world shifts from fossil fuels to
electricity, BloombergNEF predicts that the
decline in oil demand does not necessarily equate to a drop in oil prices.
In the event that investments in new supply capacity
decrease more rapidly than demand, oil prices could still remain unstable and
high.
The shift toward electrification, however, will
likely have other implications.
While most of us associate electric vehicles with
lower emissions, it’s good to consider that they are only as sustainable as the
electricity used to charge them. The shift toward electrification, then,
presents an incredible opportunity to meet the growing demand for electricity
with clean energy sources,
such as wind, solar and nuclear power.
The shift away from fossil fuels in road transport will
also require expanded infrastructure. EV charging stations,
expanded transmission capacity, and battery storage will likely all be key to
supporting the wide-scale transition from gas to electricity.
Mining.com