Exclusive: Trade tensions put energy transition at risk - BP chairman
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[June 27, 2019] By
Ron Bousso and Dmitry Zhdannikov
LONDON (Reuters) - Trade tensions risk
throwing the global economy's transition to greener energy into disarray
and could hurt energy companies' preparations toward it, BP Chairman
Helge Lund said as leaders of the world's largest economies gather for
talks in Japan.
Lund, in his first interview since taking office in January, said BP
would rather see a rapid, orderly phasing out of fossil fuels than a
delayed and disorganized transition.
The former chief executive of Norwegian oil group Equinor said BP as
well as rivals such as Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L> and ExxonMobil <XOM.N>
would have a vital role to play to ensure a successful transition to low
carbon economies.
"It is better for us to see a path that goes rapidly," Lund said. "It
will be very difficult for the oil and gas companies but that is a
better and a preferred solution than an uncontrolled sudden change maybe
10, 15 years into the future."
London-based BP, like some of its peers, has taken steps toward meeting
the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement to limit global warming, including
setting targets to reduce carbon emissions from its operations, link
them to managers' pay and ensure that investments are in line with the
accords.
But many investors say BP will have to do more, including tackling
emissions from the fuels and products it sells to millions of customers
daily, known as Scope 3 emissions, to prevent a catastrophic rise in
global temperatures.
Lund said however that such Scope 3 targets would tie BP's hands to make
future investments, whether in renewable energy or oil and gas. He
nevertheless said the company's thinking around Scope 3 was likely "to
evolve over time."
BP invested around $500 million in renewable power, electric vehicle
charging points and other low-carbon technologies last year, a fraction
of its annual spending of $15 billion.
And the pressure on companies and governments to do more to curb
greenhouse gases is rising as carbon emission levels show no sign of
decreasing.
Investors managing more than $34 trillion in assets, nearly half the
world's invested capital, this week demanded urgent action from
governments on climate change, piling pressure on leaders of the world's
20 biggest economies meeting this week.
France has said it will not accept a final G20 communique that does not
mention the Paris climate change agreement.
"The long-term framework around the energy transition is important. Over
time it is much easier for big companies like BP if we have a stable
global framework for trade and investments," Lund told Reuters at BP's
London headquarters.
Lund said an unprecedented level of cooperation was needed between
companies and governments to bring greenhouse gas emissions to zero by
the end of the century.
He urged governments to introduce a price on carbon emissions to allow
phasing out fossil fuels, even though only a handful of such schemes
have been introduced around the world.
(Graphic: BP's CO2 emissions - https://tmsnrt.rs/2LHblpG)
SOUND INVESTMENT
BP has faced a wave of protests by climate activists, including a
blockade on its London office and protests at events the company
sponsors.
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Chairman of BP Helge
Lund leaves BP AGM in Aberdeen, Britain May 21, 2019.
REUTERS/Russell Cheyne/File Photo
Big investors, including Norway's sovereign wealth fund, are reviewing
shareholdings in some oil and gas drillers, though not in BP and its largest
rivals.
Lund, who took part in discussions on a climate resolution with a group of
investors earlier this year, believes most investors understand that modern
societies are almost built on hydrocarbons.
BP forecasts that even with a rapid increase in wind, solar and other forms of
renewable energy, fossil fuels will account for the majority of energy supply
for decades to come.
Lund also warned that attempts to curb fossil fuels too fast could harm
societies.
"It takes time to change energy systems ... If you try to build down the oil and
gas industry quicker than you are able to build up a carbon neutral system you
will pull societies back."
Lund said large oil companies would be vital for the transition due to their
large balance sheets, technical expertise and innovation skills.
"To be a strong contributor in the long term we have to stay financially strong,
we have to be a good investment."
Lund also said: “There is another dimension that we need to think about and that
is if you believe that BP and other integrated oil and gas companies understand
energy markets, they have significant balance sheets, they have technical
capabilities, they have innovation capabilities, they can take risks - so in my
mind business and these companies play an incredibly important role in the
energy transition.”
SUCCESSION
Lund, 56, faces the task of leading BP through the energy transition and also
overseeing the succession to Chief Executive Bob Dudley, who took the helm in
2010 following the crisis over the Deepwater Horizon rig explosion in the Gulf
of Mexico.
Dudley also steered BP through the oil industry's worst downturn in decades so
that the company is now producing strong profits which reached a five-year high
last year of $12.7 billion.
"Bob is a very good leader, I am not sure where BP would have been without him,"
Helge said.
Lund said BP's board was preparing a number of candidates to succeed Dudley, who
turns 65 next year.
Lund, a former consultant and political adviser in the Norwegian parliament
rejected suggestions he could replace Dudley to become the next CEO.
"I've been CEO for three companies. I thought about this when I left BG whether
I should try to get one more (CEO) job or try to get a different life and I
decided on the latter and I think it is rewarding," he said.
(Graphic: BP annual results - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Bl1O05)
(The story corrects paragraph eight to show investment was for last year, not
past few years.)
(Reporting by Ron Bousso. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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