| 
						'Under siege', oil industry mulls raising returns and PR 
						game
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [January 25, 2019]   
		By Dmitry Zhdannikov 
 DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - When the 
		global oil industry held its biggest annual gathering this week in the 
		Swiss town of Davos, it invited banking bosses and fund managers to 
		discuss two key topics - climate change and pressure from investors.
 
 The conclusion of the discussions was worrying for those present - 
		pressure is rising and the industry is losing a battle not to be seen as 
		one of the world's biggest evils.
 
 The answer? Lure investors with higher returns and raise the PR game.
 
 "There is no doubt - and there is a consensus coming here in various 
		meetings in Davos - that our industry is literally under siege and the 
		future of oil is at stake," said Mohammed Barkindo, secretary-general of 
		oil producer group OPEC.
 
 "The industry needs to come together and respond positively with facts 
		and figures. We are not shying away from the fact that we have not been 
		able to communicate well," Barkindo said.
 
 
		
		 
		The industry gathered on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, 
		holding a series of closed-door meetings.
 
 The chief of oil giant Chevron, Michael Wirth, had discussions with 
		bosses from BP, Royal Dutch/Shell, Total and Aramco for the first time 
		as U.S. companies joined European and Middle Eastern peers in debating 
		climate change. Darren Woods, head of the biggest U.S. oil firm, Exxon 
		Mobil, participated in the meeting via telephone.
 
 The meetings were also attended by John Flint, chief of HSBC, Ron Mock, 
		president of Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, and executives from 
		investment firms Canyon Partners and ValueAct, two sources present at 
		the discussions said.
 
 The climate change debate has split the oil industry over the past 
		decade.
 
 While U.S. majors took an initially soft approach toward global warming, 
		Shell had urged that the industry be held responsible not only for its 
		own emissions, but also for those of consumers.
 
 Linked to that debate was pressure from investors urging the oil 
		industry to help tackle climate change, with some pension funds 
		including that of Norway saying they would stop investing in the stocks 
		of oil companies.
 
 WINNING HEARTS AND MINDS
 
 The oil industry has repeatedly tried to explain that if it stops 
		investing in new projects, the world will face an energy shortage and 
		price spikes because renewables and nuclear energy cannot meet rising 
		energy demand as the global population grows.
 
 "How do you get the hearts and minds of investors back? That is a real 
		challenge for our industry," said John Hess, the founder of independent 
		U.S. producer Hess Corp.
 
 He said investor frustration with the oil industry was manifested by the 
		fact that the share of energy companies in the S&P index had shrunk to 
		5.5 percent, from 16 percent 10 years ago.
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo arrives for a news 
			conference in Vienna, Austria, November 7, 2017. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter 
			Bader 
             
"We will have to compete against other industries in the S&P to create the value 
proposition that makes us more attractive. A new paradigm is coming up which is 
to generate free cash and share some of this cash with investors," he said.
 The U.S. oil industry has been booming in recent years but investors have been 
frustrated by heavy debts and a lack of free cash flow and dividends.
 
However, even European oil majors such as Shell and BP, which pay billions of 
dollars in dividends, have struggled to remain popular with investors.
 "We need to engage with policymakers and the public to understand the huge task 
we have ahead," Hess said.
 
 TAX ON WHOLE VALUE CHAIN
 
 BP chief Bob Dudley said the industry needed to explain the challenge of 
producing and making energy affordable for an increasing global population, 
which will see energy use rising 30 percent by 2040.
 
 "You cannot just tax energy-intensive industries and not the users of energy and 
think you're going to solve the problem. People need to use less energy. 
Philosophically, trying to look at emissions across the entire value chain is 
critical," Dudley told Reuters.
 
 
The head of state-run Saudi oil giant Aramco, Amin Nasser, said investors would 
ultimately differentiate between cleaner and more polluting companies.
 Aramco wants to list its stock sometime after 2021 in what could become the 
world's largest initial public offering. Nasser said the latest research by 
Stanford University found Aramco was the cleanest major oil company in the world 
thanks to zero gas flaring and modern field technology.
 
 He said oil companies could help cut emissions by end users but should not 
ultimately be responsible for them.
 
 
"We have to look at what we control. I have control of what I send to the grid 
in Saudi Arabia. But we do not have control over factories in Europe," Nasser 
said.
 
 "However, it doesn’t mean we don’t care about end users. As a company we are 
looking at what we can do to increase the efficiency of end users," he said.
 
 Aramco invests in research to make cars more efficient, increase mileage per 
gallon and the use of hydrogen in cars. It recently acquired high-end rubber 
producer Arlanxeo to help reduce tire friction.
 
 "We need to boost efficiency or get rid of CO2 by technology," Nasser said.
 
 (Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Dale Hudson)
 
				 
			[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |