Current:Home > MarketsNovaQuant-New Oil Projects Won’t Pay Off If World Meets Paris Climate Goals, Report Shows -Wealth Pursuit Network
NovaQuant-New Oil Projects Won’t Pay Off If World Meets Paris Climate Goals, Report Shows
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 03:06:16
The NovaQuantworld’s leading oil companies increasingly have argued that they must be part of the world’s transition to a low-carbon future. But a new report shows that despite their rhetoric, they continue to spend their money as if that transition may never come.
In just the past year, the biggest global companies committed billions of dollars to projects that will likely lose money if the world slashes fossil fuel use fast enough to meet the Paris climate accord goals, the report, released Thursday night, shows. That poses serious risks to investors.
“While they may say they support the Paris Agreement, whatever that means, it’s not reflected in their behavior,” said Andrew Grant, a senior analyst at Carbon Tracker Initiative, a financial think tank focused on energy transition.
In effect, oil companies are giving the world—and their investors—an either-or proposition: Either their balance sheets go bust when oil demand plummets, or the world does as warming soars past 2 degrees Celsius (3.6°F). It’s one or the other, the report says.
The oil and gas industry has come under increased pressure from investors who want to know that the companies they finance are navigating a future of dropping fossil fuel demand. Those investors include a broad swath of society, from large financial institutions to public pension funds.
In response, some companies have been trying to show they are taking the issue seriously. Many have committed to lowering the emissions associated with producing and refining oil and gas. Some have been spending significant sums on renewable energy and electric car charging infrastructure (though that spending still represented only about 1 percent of the industry’s budget last year, according to one report). And several are pushing for a carbon tax.
The new analysis by Carbon Tracker looks much deeper, examining specific projects that energy companies are planning, and trying to determine whether or not they actually fit with the Paris goals. Carbon Tracker did not examine the emissions associated with the projects, but instead focused entirely on their finances: “The logic we use is that of the market,” Grant said.
Cost of Oil Under Each Scenario
Grant and his team determined what the cost of oil would be under various scenarios in which governments take increasingly strict actions to limit global warming. Their analysis used data from the International Energy Agency that estimates global energy demand under the various scenarios. Then, the team examined the economics of specific oil projects, determining which ones would be too costly to pay-off under each scenario, and which would remain profitable even in a world of dwindling oil demand.
They found that billions of dollars in new projects that were greenlit last year would lose money if the world succeeds in limiting warming to below 2°C.
Not a single tar sands project is likely to pay back investors under a 2°C scenario. In fact, they found that because of the great expense of extracting oil from Canada’s tar sands, or oil sands, the projects wouldn’t even pay off under a higher scenario that would lead to nearly 3°C of warming. That scenario assumes countries will enact the commitments they’ve made under the Paris Agreement but take no more action.
Essentially, Carbon Tracker found that either the days of profitable new oil sands projects are over or we are headed to a future of dangerous warming. Despite this, last year ExxonMobil sanctioned a new $2.6 billion project, the first major new oil sands project in years, though it’s already been delayed.
Fracking May Also Be in Trouble
Much of the U.S. fracking potential may also prove too expensive to exploit in a low-carbon world, according to the report.
A $13 billion Canadian liquid natural gas project, funded by Shell and several Asian companies, also would prove to be a money-loser in scenarios limiting warming to less than 2°C. In all, the industry would have to slash future spending at least 60 percent to comply with the Paris Agreement goals, compared with the higher scenario of announced policies.
Carbon Tracker found that, already, existing projects will produce more than enough oil to send the world past 1.5°C of warming, even with some carbon capture and storage technology in place. Put another way, limiting warming to 1.5°Celsius would mean oil companies shouldn’t break ground on any new projects, and that some of their current investments would be “stranded” and lose money.
“Ultimately it comes down to the planet’s finite limits,” Grant said. In order to limit warming, only a certain amount of carbon can be emitted, and therefore only certain amounts of oil and other fuels can be burned. Meeting the Paris goals will require steep cuts in the use of oil, and that would necessarily drive down oil prices.
“It pays to consider the implication of those finite limits,” Grant said. “At the moment, I don’t see any oil and gas company that includes those limits in its investment processes.”
Published Sept. 6, 2019
veryGood! (29)
Related
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- South Africa refers Israel to ICC over Gaza attacks as pressure mounts to cut diplomatic ties
- 13-year-old boy charged with killing father in DC, police say case was a domestic incident
- Former WWE Star Gabbi Tuft Shares Transition Journey After Coming Out as Transgender
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- How to change margins in Google Docs: A guide for computer, iPad, iPhone, Android users.
- Texas A&M firing Jimbo Fisher started the coaching carousel. College Football Fix discusses
- Nikki Haley calls for name verification in social media profiles: This is a national security threat
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- U.S. applications for jobless claims rise in a labor market that remains very healthy
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Grandmother and her family try mushroom tea in hopes of psychedelic-assisted healing
- MLB team owners set to vote Thursday on proposed relocation of Athletics to Las Vegas
- Harry Styles divides social media with bold buzzcut look: 'I can't take this'
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Taylor Swift’s Ex Joe Alwyn Makes First Public Appearance in 6 Months
- Russian convicted over journalist Anna Politkovskaya's murder pardoned after serving in Ukraine
- Laguna Beach’s Stephen Colletti and Alex Weaver Are Engaged After One Year of Dating
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Horoscopes Today, November 15, 2023
Lawyer for former elections supervisor says he released videos in Georgia 2020 interference case
Experts decode 'cozy' dress code for Beyoncé film premiere: 'I do not foresee simplicity'
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith Slam “Unequivocally False” Claim He Slept With Actor Duane Martin
Why buying groceries should be less painful in the months ahead
Blaze at a coal mine company building in northern China kills 19 and injures dozens