Global energy reserves are facing a critical situation, with existing coal supplies estimated to last 140 years, oil 54 years, and natural gas 49 years. This stark assessment was presented by Academician Wang Zhonglin, Founding Director and Chief Scientist of the Beijing Institute of Nanoenergy and Nanosystems at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Speaking at a major financial summit, Wang highlighted the dual challenge of rising global energy consumption and the rapidly depleting proven reserves of fossil fuels. He emphasized that while renewable sources like solar, wind, ocean, and ambient mechanical energy are "widely distributed, low in density, highly random, and unstable," they represent the indispensable path forward for sustainable development. "We have to use them; there is no other choice," he stated.
Wang defined these variable and decentralized energy sources as "high-entropy energy." The concept of entropy, a measure of disorder, is central to his view. He posits that the inherent instability of these energy forms is precisely what creates the most significant and certain opportunity for the future.
From an investment perspective, this leads to a crucial conclusion: the entity that first masters the efficient collection and conversion of "high-entropy energy" will secure a commanding position in the next-generation energy supply chain. The global energy structure is currently at a crossroads, with traditional centralized power grids competing against distributed energy systems. The "local generation for local use" model of distributed energy has the potential to fundamentally eliminate the transmission losses associated with long-distance power delivery, marking a long-term investment avenue that the market may currently be undervaluing.
Wang cautioned that energy technology evolution operates on timelines spanning decades, citing the 70-year gap between Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction and the world's first AC generator. "Scientific development can sometimes be slow; technology requires iteration across generations." For investors, this underscores that committing to new energy technologies necessitates considerable patience and a long-term horizon.
Concluding his remarks, Wang stressed the symbiotic relationship between finance and technology in driving progress. "Finance needs technology, and technology needs finance even more; the two are inseparable," he said.
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