Clean crude? Oil firms use offsets to claim green barrels
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[April 17, 2021] By
Timothy Gardner, Nerijus Adomaitis and Rod Nickel
(Reuters) -In January, Occidental Petroleum
announced it had accomplished something no oil company had done before:
It sold a shipload of crude that it said was 100% carbon-neutral.
While the two-million-barrel cargo to India was destined to produce more
than a million tons of planet-warming carbon over its lifecycle, from
well to tailpipe, the Texas-based driller said it had completely offset
that impact by purchasing carbon credits.
Such credits are financial instruments generated by projects that reduce
or avert greenhouse-gas emissions such as mass tree plantings or solar
power farms. The projects’ owners can sell the credits to polluting
companies, who then use them to make claims of offsetting their carbon
emissions.
Details of the Occidental transaction have not been previously reported.
Two sources involved in the deal told Reuters that the driller paid
about $1.3 million for the credits – or about 65 cents per barrel. Oil
currently sells for more than $60 a barrel.
Occidental says such credits make the two-million-barrel cargo
carbon-neutral because they represent an equivalent amount of greenhouse
gas removed from the atmosphere by the projects generating the credits.
The arrangement reflects a growing trend. Oil-and-gas companies
worldwide are increasingly trying to market their products as cleaner
using a range of controversial methods, including buying credits,
powering drilling operations with renewable power and investing in
expensive and commercially unproven technology to capture and store
emissions.
The moves are designed to secure a future for the fossil fuel industry
in a world where investors, activists and regulators demand action to
stop climate change. In some cases they are also designed for profit:
Companies have begun seeking a premium price for what they call cleaner
petroleum products.
Although carbon credits do nothing to reduce the pollution from a given
barrel of oil, proponents of offset programs argue that credit purchases
help finance clean-energy efforts that otherwise would not be
profitable.
Critics blast such programs as smoke-and-mirrors public relations
efforts that allow polluters to scrub their image while they continue to
profit from climate damage.
Oil company claims of clean fuels through offseting are like "a tobacco
company saying they sell nicotine-free cigarettes because they paid
someone else to sell some chewing gum," said David Turnbull, a spokesman
for Washington-based Oil Change International, an advocacy group
opposing fossil fuels.
NO CLEAR STANDARDS
National and global carbon credit programs establish guidelines that
projects must follow to in order to sell offsets. The programs rely on
companies and nonprofit organizations such as Verra and SustainCERT to
issue and verify credits under their standards. They certify that the
projects generating credits are leading to the promised amount of
reduced emissions and would not have been built without the credit
income.
But there are no uniform standards for how to calculate the full climate
impact of fossil fuels, or how to properly offset it with environmental
projects, industry experts say. Companies buying credits are also not
obliged to disclose their cost or origin - a problem because they can
vary widely in price and quality.
In Occidental’s case, the credits were generated between 2016 and 2019
by solar, wind and other clean-energy projects in emerging economies
such as India, Thailand and Turkey, and were verified by Verra.
“The credits they issued are valid and have environmental integrity,”
said Verra spokeswoman Anne Thiel.
Verra and other verifiers, however, have since stopped approving
renewable energy projects in those nations to generate offsets after
concluding last year that they had become competitive enough to be built
even without offset credit revenue.
Occidental defended the deal, saying it could kick off a new market for
oil offset with credits that directs money to green-energy projects. "We
can be a big part of the global solution," said Richard Jackson,
Occidental's president of operations for onshore resources and carbon
management.
TREES IN SPAIN
Occidental and the cargo’s buyer, India's Reliance Industries, did not
comment on whether Reliance paid a premium for the shipment.
But other oil-and-gas companies are eager to create a market where
climate credentials allow them to command higher prices. That could
allow them to recoup the full cost - or more - of credits or other
measures that allow for the low-carbon labeling.
Lundin Energy, an independent driller with operations in Norway, is one
of the companies that sees a market opportunity in crude with a
low-carbon designation.
The company plans to spend $35 million to plant 8 million trees in
northern Spain and Ghana - something it says will allow it to generate
its own credits to offset greenhouse gas emissions from its fossil
fuels.
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Equipment used to process carbon dioxide, crude oil and water is
seen at an Occidental Petroleum Corp enhanced oil recovery project
in Hobbs, New Mexico, U.S. on May 3, 2017. REUTERS/Ernest Scheyder/File
Photo
Lundin was the first oil company in the world last year to receive independent
certification it was producing low-carbon oil based on its reduction of
emissions in producing oil from its Edvard Grieg field in Norway. It also aims
to certify low-carbon oil from the Sverdrup field, also in Norway - Western
Europe's biggest - which Lundin co-owns with a consortium of partners.
Cleaner drilling operations, however, have a limited environmental benefit. At
least 80% of greenhouse gases from oil are emitted after extraction from the
ground, according to consultancy IHS Markit.
Alex Budden, Lundin's Vice-President, said if buyers paid a 1% premium for
lower-carbon barrels, it would boost the company’s annual oil revenue by $10
million to $20 million. That would allow it to recover the costs of its offset
and efficiency efforts and eventually profit from them.
So far there have been no takers. "But it's going to happen," Budden said.
GREEN OIL SANDS?
Across the Atlantic, Canadian producers in the oil sands have a bigger
challenge. Producers there emit three to five times more carbon than the
worldwide average because more energy is needed to extract the oil, according to
Rystad Energy, a global consultancy. Its producers are hoping to change that.
Suncor Energy, for example, has pledged to cut the amount of carbon it emits per
barrel produced 30% from 2014 levels by 2030 to contribute to Canada’s climate
goals and address shareholder pressure to reduce its emissions.
It will do so by improving energy efficiency and investing in renewable energy
technologies, such as wind farms, said Chief Sustainability Officer Martha Hall
Findlay. She said Suncor will consider certifying those lower-carbon barrels.
“There's no question carbon is our Achilles heel in the oil sands," she said.
Liquefied natural gas producers are also increasingly marketing carbon-neutral
LNG. Unlike in the oil market, some LNG buyers are already paying a premium for
such cargoes.
In March, for example, Shell announced it had taken delivery of Europe’s first
ever carbon-neutral cargo of LNG from Russian supplier Gazprom. Gazprom provided
the gas and both companies chipped in for the offsets, said Mehdi Chennoufi,
Shell’s head of LNG Origination and Business Development.
Shell said the credits came from projects that protect biodiversity or restore
land, but it would not disclose the cost.
Buyers in Spain, Japan, Taiwan and China have also bought LNG certified as
carbon-neutral, a trend that has led the International Group of LNG Importers,
an association of big global LNG companies, to start working on standardized
methodology.
“Today there is a lot of talk about carbon-neutral LNG, but there is no
universal definition,” said Vincent Demoury, the group's Deputy General
Delegate.
Climate activist Andy Gheorghiu said the notion of carbon-neutral liquefied
natural gas is like “vegan pork sausage."
“It's just nonsense,” he said.
Other companies are turning to carbon-capture technology - despite its history
of high costs and operational difficulties - to offset their products' climate
impact.
Qatar, the world's biggest LNG producer, announced in February that it is
building a carbon-capture project at its North Field expansion project in the
Persian Gulf.
Occidental is also developing the largest-ever direct-air-capture facility, to
pull 500,000 tonnes per year of carbon dioxide out of the open air near some of
its Texas oil fields, using fans and chemical reactions. That's equal to the
annual emissions from nearly 110,000 U.S. cars.
Environmentalists criticize such projects because they could extend the life of
the fossil fuel industry.
If Occidental’s project works, for example, the company plans to pump the carbon
back into the Texas oil fields, raising reservoir pressure to extract more
crude.
Occidental says it hopes to market crude oil produced in this way as the
feedstock for refining jet and marine fuel - providing a way for those
industries to claim they have offset their emissions.
Marion Verles, Chief Executive Officer at SustainCERT, the credit verifier, said
such offset schemes can help reduce overall greenhouse-gas emissions - but could
also backfire.
Telling consumers they can consume carbon-neutral fossil fuels sends the
message, she said, that "behavioral change is no longer needed.”
(Additional reporting by Shadia Nasralla, Nina Chestney, and Susanna Twidale in
London; Kate Abnett in Brussels; Isla Binnie in Madrid; and Nidhi Verma in New
Delhi; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Brian Thevenot)
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