Oil Companies Ponder Climate Change, But Profits Still Rule

How much has changed since his speech? Most large oil companies no longer deny the connection between burning fossil fuels and climate change. In fact, they are scrambling to position themselves to be seen as part of the solution to what is increasingly seen by worried citizens as a major threat.
Royal
Dutch Shell, the European oil company, France’s Total and others are putting
substantial funds into clean-energy investments. Several companies have formed
the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative to invest in low-carbon technologies and
reduce the powerful greenhouse gas, methane.
The
companies are trying to deal with what is shaping up as a major threat to their
businesses: societal demands, especially in Europe, for a sharp curtailment of
the consumption of the oil and gas that are the lifeblood of these
organizations. “Climate change poses an existential risk to the oil and gas
industry,” wrote Neil Beveridge, an analyst at Bernstein, a Wall Street
research firm, in a recent note to clients.
Yet
about a third more oil is being burned than in the late 1990s, mostly because
increasing numbers of consumers in countries like China and India have the
means to drive cars, fly on airplanes and buy products made of oil-based
plastic.
And
there is skepticism among people familiar with the industry about whether the
world will be able to phase out fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal as would
seem to be required to maintain global temperatures within what are deemed safe
limits. “Trillions of dollars would be needed” to replace current energy
systems with wind and solar, Mr. Beveridge said in an interview.
He
noted the peculiar situation in which the oil and gas industry finds itself. It
is close to being shunned by environmentalists and some investors, but, at the
same time, “pretty essential to making the world go around,” he said.
Confronted
with these dilemmas, oil companies are taking quite different approaches.
Shell, for instance, is putting money into alternative-energy investments,
especially in electricity.
Shell
has put together the beginnings of an electricity business in recent years,
buying pieces like a small British utility, a Dutch electric-vehicle charging
start-up and investing in offshore wind generation. These investments aim to
position Shell for a new energy age that may be anchored in clean electric
power for vehicles and other uses rather than fossil fuels.
In
an interview, Ed Daniels, executive vice president for strategy at Shell, said
the company recognized that to achieve the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement on
climate “enormous change was needed in the energy systems,” which are
responsible for a large proportion of greenhouse gases. Shell, he said, wanted
to help lead that shift, a role he said was “fundamental for the long-term
success of the company.”
Shell
seems to be edging away from being an oil company. Chevron, the American
company, is not. Instead, it seems to be focusing on making its oil and gas
operations more efficient and less emissions intensive. Chevron argues that it
would be a mistake to force well-run companies to reduce their oil and gas
production. Indeed, there may be scope for the most efficient producers to
increase their oil and gas output, while still meeting climate change goals,
the company says.
“You
can increase your fossil-fuel production, deliver superior returns for your
shareholders, and still be compliant with Paris, “said Michael Rubio, Chevron’s
general manager for environmental, social and governance engagement.
Critics
say that oil companies are not backing up their talk of concern about climate
change with dollars. While companies are making green-energy investments, a
much larger proportion of most oil companies’ spending is going into oil and
gas projects that produce greenhouse gas emissions.
“We
have yet to see their capital spending match their words and reflect a
recognition that they need to embrace the transition,” said Fred Krupp,
president of the Environmental Defense Fund, which has worked with the industry
to reduce greenhouse gases.
Analysts
say that Shell is already a leader among the major oil producers in moving
toward low-carbon energy, yet from some perspectives the industry, and even
Shell, are moving too slowly to head off what environmentalists fear may be
global calamity with higher temperatures wiping out crops, generating powerful
storms and creating other dangers.
Valentina
Kretzschmar, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie, a market research firm, figured that
from 2016 to 2018 seven major oil companies, including Shell and Exxon Mobil,
spent $5.8 billion on alternative-energy acquisitions, about 5 percent of their
outlays on oil and gas deals and new ventures in these emissions-producing
fuels. Shell said it planned to spend $1 billion to $2 billion a year on what
it called new energy investments, a small amount compared with $25 billion or
more in overall capital outlays.
Why
the relatively paltry sums? Ms. Kretzschmar said the companies were still
feeling their way in what was unfamiliar territory for them.
In
making such deals, oil companies have their eyes on several constituencies.
There is a growing body of shareholders wary of investing in oil companies,
either because they disapprove of the role that their products play in climate
change or they worry that oil will not be used in the future. If so, it follows
that the troves of oil and gas that companies own rights to will be stranded in
the ground.
The
companies, though, think they will alienate some investors and see their shares
pummeled if they are perceived as wasting money or putting it into businesses
that do not produce satisfactory profits and the cash to pay generous
dividends. “Any larger investment would probably be difficult for shareholders
to digest,” Ms. Kretzschmar said. Alternative energy ventures are viewed as a
less profitable business than oil and gas.
Mr.
Daniels said Shell was aiming for 8 percent to 12 percent profits on the
company’s new energy investments. Stuart Joyner, an analyst at Redburn, a
market research firm, said there were not many large-scale alternative energy
projects that could absorb the very large investments that oil companies were
in the habit of making.
One
area that does seem to be working in this regard is building enormous wind
farms for electricity generation. Government subsidies helped lift this
business off the ground in Northern Europe and it is spreading to the United
States and Asia.
The
investments required for offshore wind can be very large, and some of the oil
companies are starting to play. Norway’s Equinor, the former Statoil, was part
of a joint venture that won a preliminary deal on Sept. 20 to build what will
be the world’s largest wind farm in Dogger Bank in the North Sea off eastern
England at an overall cost of 9 billion pounds (about $11 billion).
Some
investors conceded that oil companies will need time to shift.
“I
am very conscious that this is a multidecade-long transition,” said Adam
Matthews, head of ethics and engagement at the Church of England Pensions
Board, which supports retired church personnel. However, Mr. Matthews, who has
talked with oil companies to push them toward greener practices, said there
were “a large number of laggards” in the oil business “that have yet to move.”
The distance between oil companies and what investors, environmentalists and, electorates expect from them seems destined to widen.