The International Energy Agency (IEA) in Paris releases an annual report that significantly influences government policies and billions of dollars in energy investments. An energy expert claims that the IEA’s predictions have become affected by the climate objectives of its member countries.
Robert McNally, president of research and analysis firm Rapidan Energy, said, “The IEA has strayed from its mission as an energy-security watchdog,”
“Its long-term energy forecasts can no longer be trusted,” McNally added.
McNally, a former energy adviser to President George W. Bush, recently outlined his argument in the opinion section of the Wall Street Journal. His main criticism targets the core of the IEA’s work: energy modelling.
Energy experts have supported the IEA against claims of politicization.
Jason Bordoff, the founding director of Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, said on LinkedIn that McNally’s criticisms go “too far.”
“It would be far worse for energy security, core to the IEA’s mission, to ignore the risks of climate change or fail to produce the data needed to understand what is actually required to rise to the climate challenge,” Bordoff said in his post.