From molecules to electrons; can Big Oil become Big
Power?
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[April 04, 2019]
By Ron Bousso and Susanna Twidale
LONDON (Reuters) - European oil companies
have started to address what they worry may one day be an existential
threat to their business -- the end of a century of oil demand growth in
a low carbon world.
The emergence of the electric vehicle and demand among investors and
consumers for cleaner energy to limit climate change has pushed the
European side of Big Oil to take baby steps toward refocusing their
businesses from oil production and refining to electricity via natural
gas and renewables.
Their funding for oil exploration dwarfs any alternatives, but they are
buying up power generation and retail utilities to integrate with their
long-standing natural gas and emerging renewables ventures.
Relatively small investments in electricity aim to help them ride the
energy transition by offering households and businesses cleaner power
than coal can provide and giving their petrol stations a green edge with
EV charging.
Testing an electrification route also helps meet demands from
shareholders that they "future proof" their businesses.
(GRAPHIC: Small spending - https://tmsnrt.rs/2HWmdxx)
The International Energy Agency predicts regulatory changes to curb
carbon emissions will mean demand for electricity will grow much faster
than that for oil as Asia's power-hungry middle class expands. The
industry sees oil demand peaking any time from 2020 to 2040.
Diversification is not new to the oil and gas business and has a patchy
record at best. Oil majors have bought stakes in coal, household
cleaning, pet food, nutrition, shrimp trading, nappies, hotels and
steel, with limited success. Critics say power will not deliver the
profits the oil and gas companies need to sustain the large dividends
their investors are used to.
BP lost billions in its first foray into renewables 20 years ago when it
rebranded itself "Beyond Petroleum". It closed its solar manufacturing
division in 2011 and tried to get rid of its wind farms but says it now
has a more successful model.
"Most of the things we do today are linked to our core capabilities,"
Dev Sanyal, head of BP's alternative energy division, told Reuters. "If
you can start combining molecules and electrons in an integrated offer
you start creating something of greater interest."
(GRAPHIC: Power race - https://tmsnrt.rs/2WuFSry)
PROFIT
Profit is the first challenge when joining the dots between renewables,
gas-fired plants and utilities facing growing competition in markets
that are fragmenting fast. None of the companies break down their
results from renewables or power.
BP returned to solar in 2017 with a $200 million investment in UK solar
generator Lightsource and dipped a toe into UK electricity retail the
same year by buying a 25 percent stake in Pure Planet, a small
challenger brand supplying some 100,000 customers with renewable
electricity.
"The renewables business last year was free cash flow generative...
we've been moving in a positive trajectory over the past three years,"
Sanyal said. "Today we have industrial customers and over time there
could be retail customers."
He said BP plans to expand its alternative energy capacity - the biggest
among the majors, according to CDP, a climate-focused research provider
that works with major institutional investors. Gazprom's large
hydropower interests put it in second place ahead of Total and then
Shell, CDP calculations show.
On retail, the French and Italians are ahead.
French giant Total 's purchase of Direct Energie last year gave it a
portfolio of gas fired and renewable energy power plants and a platform
to challenge state-controlled utility EDF .
It is targeting seven million customers in France and Belgium by 2022
and said in a recent investor presentation it aims to make low carbon
electricity 15 to 20 percent of its total offering by 2040.
Eni says it is now Italy’s second largest electricity producer with six
power plants, large electricity trading business and two million
customers.
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Pylons of high-tension
electricity power lines are seen after sunset outside Goussainville,
near Paris, France, August 8, 2017. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann /File
Photo
Shell says it wants to become the biggest electricity provider and over the past
year has made a number of investments including a Brazilian gas-fired power
plant and a UK utility.
Last week it renamed that utility Shell Energy and switched all 710,000
customers to 100 percent renewable electricity, offering them discounts on
petrol and electric car charging in its petrol stations.
Mark Gainsborough, head of the Anglo-Dutch company's new energy division, told
Reuters it aims to grow its retail customer base in Britain.
Shell looked into acquiring the retail division of rival SSE in recent months
but discussions made little progress due to concerns over the government's
decision to cap most domestic energy prices, industry sources said, an example
of the risks facing power markets around the world. Both Shell and SSE declined
to comment.
In a sign of the growing competition among the majors for power assets, Total is
considering a rival bid to Shell for Dutch energy company Eneco, according to
sources close to the matter. Total declined to comment.
Eneco is valued at around 3 billion euros and has 2.2 million customers and
Shell's Gainsborough said it could provide a template for a power business
model.
"The model aspiration is to find an integrated mode with positions in trading
and supply and having customer books," Gainsborough said.
CAUTION
Former BP CEO John Browne, who drove the London-based company's first push into
renewables, said much lower production costs for wind and solar projects and a
greater understanding about the future growth of power markets had changed the
picture dramatically since then.
"The question is whether you have the skills, the people and the determination
to make this work and are you happy that in reality the returns you make are
better than the returns you make in your other business," Browne told Reuters.
Returns on solar and wind projects are typically around 5-10 percent, according
to climate research provider CDP, half of those from many oil and gas projects.
So far the oil majors have committed a small fraction of their annual investment
to low-carbon technologies as they balance shareholder demands for returns and
innovation.
Shell and Equinor plan to put between 5 and 6 percent of their capex investments
into clean energy technologies, while Eni is targeting around 4 percent and
Total and BP plan about 3 percent each, CDP research showed.
Those numbers rise with investments in gas-fired power generation but are still
small enough to swallow if rivals make things difficult, particularly at the
retail end, where they include supermarkets, fintech startups and Amazon.
"If at the end of the day it doesn’t work these companies have deep pockets and
would be able to spin off power divisions," said Munir Hassan, Head of Clean
Energy at law firm CMS in the UK.
The differential in returns from power versus oil and gas had not changed much,
he said, but there was a new impetus because perceptions among shareholders and
their children had.
"Some of the oil companies will succeed," Hassan said. "But I wonder whether
they will find it more painful than they expected."
(Additional reporting by Stephen Jewkes; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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