From wind power to cow manure: oil traders seek new
profit recipe
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[February 12, 2020] By
Julia Payne
LONDON (Reuters) - The world's largest oil
traders are pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into
climate-friendly projects - including wind farms, cow manure plants and
blue hydrogen - as they seek to match the profits they make from trading
oil.
The energy industry as a whole faces an existential threat from the
shift to a lower carbon future and faces growing pressure from
investors, governments, activists and financiers to find a sustainable
business model.
For oil trading houses, the challenge is more acute, as their profit
margins have already shrunk due to increased competition, regulatory
scrutiny and growing industry transparency.
Trading firms such as Vitol and Trafigura have already put money into
wind farms, hydrogen, solar, EV technology, biofuels and biomethane as
potential replacements for oil, traditionally their big profit driver.
But like the big international oil companies they have yet to figure out
what could become their new business model for an
environmentally-friendly future.
"Nobody has figured out how to make money yet," Jean-Francois Lambert of
consultancy Lambert Commodities said. "Trading firms are now testing the
waters."
Traders make a living by exploiting niche high-margin opportunities to
supply energy and commodities, doing business that other companies
either fail to spot or find too risky.
Those opportunities are scant in the renewables sector.
"Renewable projects are reaching a scale which makes them attractive
investment propositions, but there is a lot of capital chasing a limited
number of projects," Vitol Chief Executive Russell Hardy said. "Finding
the right project at the right price is not easy."
Changes in the financial services industry are also giving the search
for new business a sense of urgency.
French bank Natixis, for example, was the first to introduce internal
financial penalties in September on deals that are not environmentally
friendly.
The bank said deals classed as "green" would receive a reduction of up
to 50% on the amount of capital the bank must retain to back them, known
as risk weighted assets. A deal that is not environmentally-friendly,
so-called "brown", will face an increase in risk weighting by up to 24%.
With the European Central Bank pushing a green agenda, other major
European banks are also considering similar schemes, two banking sources
said.
"Minimum standards for regular loans are getting tougher and tougher
too. There's pressure (on traders) from non-governmental organizations
and banks," one of the banking sources said.
"Also it's an HR question - what millennial wants a big bonus from a
dirty industry?"
CAPTURING ELECTRONS
Power trading is one way to capture the renewables shift as varying
sources will create new dislocations.
"There will be a shift from molecules to electrons, worldwide EVs
(electronic vehicles) will add an incremental 250GW per hour of demand
by 2030,” Vitol's Hardy said.
Vitol and Geneva-based Mercuria already have active power teams but
others are just starting. Trafigura opened its first power and
renewables trading desk in November and in January, Gunvor Group
restarted power trading with a dedicated desk in London.
"The power industry has similarities with the way the oil industry
operates including regional dislocations which traders are known for
helping to fill," Trafigura chief executive Jeremy Weir told Reuters in
Davos.
He also said shipping accounted for 89% of Trafigura's carbon emissions
and that the wider industry would need to set a benchmark for tracking
this carbon footprint.
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A wind farm is shown in Movave, California, U.S., November 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
At the end of last year, Trafigura invested in a green hydrogen firm and made
its first ever investment in a solar project in Mali this month.
WASTE AND HYDROGEN
Vitol has set up an internal working group to examine new renewable energy
technologies and ways in which the business can participate in a lower-carbon
economy.
The firm has allocated $300 million for renewables investment with more than
$200 million already allocated, the company said in October.
Separately, Vitol has set up solar farm capacity in the United States and has a
major wind project in Ukraine through a joint venture VLC Renewables.
The wind farm will produce 500 MW of power and when finished will be among the
top five largest onshore wind generators.
Vitol is part of the Humber Zero project in Britain to turn the Humber River
estuary into the country's first zero carbon cluster by 2040.
The company will produce "blue" hydrogen for power at its 1.2 GW Immingham power
plant to feed the Humber and Lindsey oil refineries. The plan is awaiting
government approval.
Blue hydrogen, produced from natural gas, can be used as a low-carbon source for
power generation.
Other similar projects exist but the costs are too high for widespread use.
"Per unit of energy, hydrogen supply costs are 1.5 to 5 times those of natural
gas ... The development of hydrogen infrastructure is a challenge and is holding
back widespread adoption," a report by the International Renewable Energy Agency
from September 2019 said.
Waste also is a potential new profit avenue.
Vitol has invested in several start-ups, including firms that turn coal and
plastic waste into fuel. In Idaho, it has invested in a cow manure "bio
digester" that produces 700,000 cubic feet of bio methane per day.
CUTTING EMISSIONS
Mining and trading firm Glencore has capped coal output and is reducing diesel
generation at some of its remote mines by using hydroelectricity, wind and
electronic vehicles.
Trafigura and Glencore are focusing on ingredients for EV batteries. Trafigura
has invested in Finnish mining firm Terrafame to produce nickel and cobalt.
Geneva-based Gunvor Group plans to invest hundreds of millions to reduce carbon
exhaust at its three European refineries and add a biofuel unit at one of its
refineries that will use excess hydrogen.
Biofuels will be a focus after it bought two Spanish plants that turn waste
oils, like cooking oil, into biofuel this year.
"The energy transition will be harder and longer than people think," Gunvor
Chief Executive Torbjorn Tornqvist told Reuters, with oil demand growing though
its percentage in the energy mix will fall.
"Gas must replace coal. Half the emissions would go just like that. We stepped
back from coal trading for commercial reasons but now I won't go back into it
out of conviction."
(Graphic: Oil traders' revenues and profits link: https://tmsnrt.rs/2vYmACK)
(Reporting By Julia Payne, additional reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov in Davos;
Editing by Simon Webb and Jane Merriman)
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