Oil firms could waste
trillions if climate targets reached -report
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[June 21, 2017]
By Ron Bousso
LONDON (Reuters) - Energy giants including
Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell risk wasting more than a third of
their budgets on projects that will not be needed if climate targets are
to be met, a thinktank report shows.
More than $2 trillion of planned investment in oil and gas projects by
2025 could be redundant if governments stick to targets to lower carbon
emissions to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, according to a
report by the Carbon Tracker thinktank and institutional investors.
It compared the carbon intensity of oil and gas projects planned by 69
companies with requirements needed to meet the warming target set by the
2015 Paris agreement, which will require curbing fossil fuel
consumption.
It found Exxon, the world's top publicly-traded oil and gas company,
risks wasting up to half its budget on new fields that will not be
needed.
Shell and France's Total would see up to 40 percent of their budgets
misspent.
Fossil fuel producers have come under growing pressure from investors to
reduce carbon emissions and increase transparency over future
investment.
Sweden's largest national pension fund, AP7, one of the authors of the
report, said last week it had wound down investments in six companies,
including Exxon, which it said had violated the Paris agreement.
Top energy companies have voiced support for the Paris agreement reached
by nearly 200 countries. Many of them have urged governments to impose a
tax on carbon emissions to support cleaner sources of energy such as
gas.
U.S. President Donald Trump said this month he would withdraw the United
States from the Paris accord which he said would undermine the U.S.
economy.
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An energy installation on a property leased to Devon Energy
Production Company by the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City is
seen near Guthrie, Oklahoma, September 15, 2015. REUTERS/Nick Oxford
The report found five of the most expensive projects, including the extension of
Kazakhstan's giant Kashagan field and Bonga Southwest and Bonga North in
Nigeria, will not be needed if the global warming target is to be met.
Around two thirds of the potential oil and gas production which would be surplus
to requirement is controlled by the private sector, "demonstrating how the risk
is skewed toward listed companies rather than national oil companies", the
report said.
Saudi Arabia's state-run Aramco, widely considered the lowest cost oil producer,
would see up to 10 percent of its production rendered uneconomical, the report
said.
The report's authors said their discussions with oil companies had shown the
companies wanted to remain flexible to respond to future developments and
possible changes in the oil price.
Companies including Shell and BP have rejected the idea that assets could end up
redundant, saying the reserves they hold are too small to be affected by any
long-term decline in demand.
"We believe our business strategy is resilient to the energy transition. We are
convinced there is a role for gas to help with the transition to a lower carbon
world," Shell said in response to the report.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso; editing by Adrian Croft and Jason Neely)
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