Oil industry rides into climate summit bigger
than ever
Price spikes driven by the war in Ukraine are helping
fill the petroleum giants’ coffers, despite governments’ promises of a greener
era.
BY BEN
LEFEBVRE AND ZACK COLMAN
NOVEMBER
20, 2023 6:00 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/cop28-climate-summit-dubai-oil-industry-bigger-than-ever/
WASHINGTON
— Eight years after Paris, the oil business is bigger than ever.
Profits are
soaring. Production is climbing — and marking a record year in the United
States. The industry is even poised to gain from the crusade to rein in climate
pollution, including the billions of dollars in incentives that U.S. President
Joe Biden is offering for wind farms, battery minerals and carbon-carrying
pipelines.
It’s not
necessarily the future that appeared to be dawning in 2015, when nations
gathered in the French capital to pledge an assault on the fossil fuel
pollution that’s warming the planet. But it's the reality that advocates and
governments will confront when the next climate summit dawns Nov. 30 in Dubai’s
Expo City, a showpiece of the United Arab Emirates’ petroleum wealth —
hammering home the reality that oil and gas producers are thriving, not
shrinking, during the era of ambitious green agendas.
The
reasons, analysts say, include the spikes in fuel prices driven by the Russian
invasion of Ukraine and the economic recovery from the pandemic, as well as
struggles to deploy cleaner technologies such as wind turbines or electric cars
on the scale needed to meet the crisis.
“The death
of the oil industry has been greatly overstated,” said Kevin Book, managing
director at the consulting firm ClearView Energy. “The realities of demand and
the limitations of alternatives haven't changed.”
The
long-term prognosis for fossil fuels could still turn out to be cloudy: The
Paris-based International Energy Agency reported last month that “the beginning
of the end of the fossil fuel era” may be at hand, with demand for oil, natural
gas and coal all expected to peak by the end of this decade.
Still, the
oil industry’s Goliaths are placing big bets that fossil fuels have plenty of
life in them.
The United
States’ two oil and gas supergiants are leveraging their wealth to buy rivals
with untapped reserves — Chevron is buying Hess for $53 billion, while Exxon
Mobil is spending about $60 billion to buy a Texas-based company with vast land
holdings in the state’s fracking hotbed. Europe’s largest industry champions,
BP and Shell, are likewise basing their businesses firmly on oil and gas while
walking back their pledges to green their businesses.
The
companies have all touted their investments in cleaner technologies, such as
carbon capture, geothermal and mining for the raw materials used in batteries.
They have promised to cut their climate pollution. But Sen. Jeff Merkley
(D-Ore.) dismissed those proclamations as “99 percent greenwashing,” saying:
“What they're trying to do is protect their established ownership of fossil
assets."
When world
leaders huddled in Paris to strike their climate deal in 2015, levels of
heat-trapping carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were near 402 parts per million
— already high enough to threaten a disastrous future for human civilization
and the Earth’s ecosystems. Now they’re approaching 420 parts per million,
levels that scientists say the planet hasn’t seen since more than 4 million
years ago, when seas were 75 feet higher.
Amid those
warnings, even government leaders who support taking action on climate change
have found fossil fuels impossible to quit.
Biden's
pledge to avert climate catastrophe included a campaign promise in 2020 to halt
new drilling on federal land. That triggered expectations among some market
analysts that his policies might crush oil company stock prices.
Instead,
Biden has presided over a record year for U.S. oil production and natural gas
exports, and his administration has greenlit an array of fossil fuel projects,
including oil drilling in Alaska and an Appalachian gas pipeline.
Oil company
profits in the most recent quarter didn't reach the stratospheric heights that
record-high gasoline prices delivered last year, yet they still beat
pre-pandemic returns. Exxon reported earnings of $9.1 billion, and its
refineries churned out the highest volume of fuel for that period since 1999,
the company said in a financial filing. Chevron reported $6.5 billion in profit
for the quarter, down from its $11.1 billion haul a year earlier but still
about double what it earned in the same period of 2019.
Exxon’s
share price has more than doubled since Biden took office, when the oil market
was in the doldrums because of the pandemic. Chevron's stock has climbed nearly
60 percent since then.
And oil
companies may be ready to rev up their production engines soon. After years of
focusing on returning money to shareholders and shrinking their budgets for new
projects, industry capital expenditures are forecast to grow from $500 billion
last year to $640 billion by 2030, according to a report from the International
Energy Forum and S&P Global.
At the same
time, the industry is gearing up to take advantage of the billions of dollars
that Democrats in Congress and the Biden administration have made available for
emerging climate technologies, such as those focused on capturing greenhouse
gas pollution before it hits the air and deploying hydrogen as a carbon-free
fuel. Those technologies, along with geothermal energy and wind power, could
offer opportunities to oil and gas companies with long experience in digging
holes, laying pipelines and building structures offshore.
Exxon Mobil
also announced plans to begin drilling for ancient salt water in Arkansas and
extract its lithium, a critical mineral for electric vehicle batteries. It said
its goal is to produce enough lithium to cover the manufacturing needs of more
than 1 million electric vehicles a year.
Even so,
some of these companies are walking back their pledges to lessen their carbon
pollution. BP earlier this year said it would reduce the carbon emissions from
its energy production by 20 to 30 percent by 2030, down from its previous
pledge for a 35-to-50-percent reduction. It plans to spend $8 billion to grow
its oil and gas production, a move that would increase emissions but that the
company said is needed to keep fuel affordable.
“Action is
needed to accelerate the transition,” then-BP chief executive Bernard Looney
said in a news release announcing the change in the target. “And — at the same
time — action is needed to make sure that the transition is orderly, so that
affordable energy keeps flowing where it’s needed today.”
BP said it
would also invest $8 billion in renewable energy.
A BP
spokesperson said the company’s ambition to reach net zero carbon emissions by
2050 has not changed.
Shell also
said it would invest less in renewable energy production than it had first
planned, citing low profits from that business.
But Shell
spokesperson Curtis Smith insisted by email that the company's strategy had not
changed, and that it still intended to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions
by 2050.
"An
unwavering commitment to capital discipline combined with exceptional delivery
will create value for shareholders and allow Shell to supply the energy the
world needs today while contributing to the growth of profitable, low-carbon
business models that will play a critical role in a balanced energy
transition," he wrote.
BP also
said it remained committed to lowering its carbon footprint. The company plans
to invest $60 billion by the end of the decade in electric vehicle charging,
low carbon hydrogen, renewables and using plant-based ingredients to make fuel.
Chevron has
touted plans for developing geothermal energy and cutting the amount of
greenhouse gas that comes from its operations, but has also made it clear it is
full steam ahead in its efforts to produce oil and natural gas.
“It’s very
difficult to change as rapidly as some people would like,” Chevron CEO Mike
Wirth said earlier this month in an interview with Barron’s. “There’s massive
investments, trillions of dollars, in the existing system that has evolved over
150 years.”
Exxon has
said it will spend $17 billion through 2027 to reduce its own climate
pollution. But the company dismissed a shareholder call for it to release a
study on how its oil and gas holdings would be affected by the sorts of
reduction in fossil fuel use that the IEA forecast in its report.
“It is
highly unlikely that society would accept the degradation in global standard of
living required to permanently achieve a scenario like the IEA” report, Exxon
said in its reply to the proposal.
That reply
infuriated environmental groups and climate scientists, who have accused Exxon
of knowing for decades that greenhouse gases coming from the industry would
trap heat in the atmosphere and lead to global climate change.
“Why aren't
they out there searching for alternatives helping us make the conversion” to
clean energy, asked Don Wuebbles, a professor emeritus of atmospheric science
at the University of Illinois who led a congressionally mandated report on
climate science in 2017. “They're gonna spend their money looking for more oil.
…They're full speed ahead. That's the problem.”
Exxon
spokesperson Erin Szeligowski said the company's commitment to lowering
emissions from its own operations, and those from other companies through its
Low Carbon Solutions business, "is evident."
"We’ve
built an entire business dedicated to this goal, and are investing $17 billion
on lower emissions initiatives over the next four years to do so," she
said by email.
Two major
developments have helped explain the oil and gas sector’s resilience, analysts
said. First, the pandemic temporarily crushed oil demand, which benefited the
more efficient, deep-pocketed producers who were able to buy out weaker
competitors. Then Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine drove up oil and gas
prices, creating new financial incentives for oil production — and even
prompted the Biden administration to call on companies to ramp up drilling to
ease pain for consumers.
Oil
companies are facing pressure not only from shareholders worried about profits,
but also politicians spooked by recent inflation, said Francisco Blanch, head
of global commodities, equity derivatives and cross-asset quantitative
investment strategies at Bank of America Securities.
Russia’s
war against Ukraine sent energy markets into an upheaval that is only now
settling, and that shakeup put a focus on ensuring that countries had a secure
energy supply, Blanch said in an interview.
“What is
everyone worried about? Inflation,” he said. “If you don’t have stable domestic
gas or oil resources, you become very exposed to whatever is happening in the
world. And that’s a very worrying thought to politicians.”
Still, some
reasons for climate optimism exist alongside the oil and gas industry’s
resurgence, said John Larsen, a partner at the climate and energy research firm
Rhodium Group.
Going into
the Paris climate conference in 2015, studies indicated that the planet was
projected to see temperatures rise by nearly 4 degrees Celsius by the end of
the century — a recipe for full-blown catastrophe. Now, it’s on pace for a
still-disastrous increase of 2.7 degrees based on the policies that countries
have adopted since then, according to the Climate Action Tracker, a project
that assesses national progress on meeting carbon emissions goals. The Paris
Agreement had set an official target of 2 degrees, along with a more
aspirational goal of 1.5.
Clean
energy technology has also scaled rapidly, with electric vehicle adoption
taking off much faster than many anticipated. Annual electric vehicle sales are
set to exceed 1 million for the first time this year, with sales through the
third quarter up 55 percent from 2022, BloombergNEF said in an analysis last
week.On top of that, regulators and oil and gas companies are starting to crack
down on emissions of methane, a potent climate pollutant that frequently leaks
and vents from fossil fuel operations.
The Global
Methane Pledge brought 150 countries behind a pact to shave methane pollution
30 percent below 2020 levels during this decade. Satellites that can detect
enormous plumes are proliferating, offering a way to track the emissions from
oil fields and remote transportation infrastructure. And new regulations in the
U.S., South America and Europe are taking force, prompting oil and gas
companies to partner with third-party firms to stomp out leaks.
“It's a
huge multiplier effect to avoid methane emissions or to quickly stop them,”
Gordon said. “That is the race that we are on now.”
But it’s a
race that veterans of the climate talks admit the world is in danger of losing.
Even in the U.S., whose delegation will travel to Dubai touting last year's
massive climate law, activists have been angered by Biden's approval of the
Alaskan oil project and his failure to halt new lease sales in the Gulf of
Mexico.
Those
actions have emboldened other countries, particularly developing nations with
undeveloped oil and gas reserves, to press for the chance to tap their own
fossil fuel resources — which will be a major theme undergirding the Dubai
talks.
“Unfortunately,
a number of countries are going in the wrong direction” on fossil fuel
production if the world is to combat climate change, said David Waskow,
director of the World Resources Institute’s international climate initiative.
“We’re clearly doing expansion of oil and gas.”
This
article is part of the Road to COP special report, presented by SQM. The
article is produced with full editorial independence by POLITICO reporters and
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