Wins by climate activists find unlikely backer, ‘hostile regimes’
With Western oil majors pressured to cut emissions, state-owned oil firms will step in without those expectations. Climate activists who scored big against Western majors last week had some unlikely cheerleaders in the oil capitals of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Russia. Defeats in the courtroom and boardroom mean Royal Dutch Shell, ExxonMobil and Chevron are all under pressure to cut carbon emissions faster. That is good news for the likes of Saudi Arabias national oil company Saudi Aramco, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and Russias Gazprom and Rosneft. It means more business for them and the Saudi-led Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Oil and gas demand is far from peaking and supplies will be needed, but international oil companies will not be allowed to invest in this environment, meaning national oil companies have to step in, said Amrita Sen from Energy Aspects consultancy. Climate activists scored a major victory with a Dutch court ruling requiring Royal Dutch Shell to drastically cut emissions, which in effect means cutting oil and gas output. The company will appeal. The same day, the top two US oil companies, Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp, both lost battles with shareholders who accused them of dragging their feet on climate change. It looks like the West will have to rely more on what it calls hostile regimes for its supply, joked a high-level executive from Russias Gazprom oil and gas group, referring to energy companies about the world owned completely or mostly by the state. Saudi Aramco, Adnoc and Gazprom all declined to comment. Oil major Rosneft, in which the Russian state has the biggest stake, also declined to comment. A senior Saudi Aramco staffer said the court ruling would make it easier for OPEC to ramp up production. It is great for Aramco, the staffer said. Western oil majors like Shell have dramatically expanded in the last 50 years, as the West sought to cut its reliance on energy from the volatile Middle East and from Russia. Those same Western energy majors, including BP and Total, have set out plans to sharply reduce emissions by 2050. But they face growing pressure from investors to do more to meet UN-backed targets to limit global warming. Saudi Aramco, listed on the Saudi bourse but majority state-owned, is not under the same sort of pressure to cut its carbon emissions, although the kingdoms rulers aim to sharply increase the countrys use of renewables. Gazprom expects demand for natural gas to grow in the coming decades and for it to play a bigger role in energy consumption than renewable sources and hydrogen. Western oil majors control around 15 percent of global output, while OPEC and Russia have a share of about 40 percent. That share has been relatively stable in the last decades as rising demand was met with new producers like smaller private US shale firms, which today face similar climate-related pressures. Since 1990, global oil consumption has grown to 100 million barrels per day from 65 million bpd, with Asia providing the lions share of growth. Countries like China and India have made no pledges to reduce oil consumption, which on a per capita basis is still a fraction of the levels in the West. China will rely heavily on gas to cut its huge coal consumption. The International Energy Agency, which looks after energy policies of the West, issued a stark appeal last month to the world to essentially scrap all new oil and gas developments. But it gave no clear formula on how to reduce demand. Despite pressure from activists, investors and banks to cut emissions, Western oil majors are also tasked with maintaining high dividends amid heavy debt. Dividends from oil companies represent significant contributions to pension funds. It is vital that the global oil industry aligns its production to the Paris goals. But that must be done in step with policy, changes to the demand side, and the rebuilding of the worlds energy system, said Nick Stansbury from Legal & General, which manage 1.3 trillion British pounds ($1.8 trillion) in assets on behalf of savers, retirees and institutions. Forcing one company to do so in the courts may (if it is effective at all) only result in higher prices and foregone profits, he said. Legal & General, one of the worlds largest fund managers, holds assets in most oil majors. Climate lawsuits have been filed in 52 countries in the past two decades, with 90 percent of those in the United States and European Union, risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft said. In the West, energy investments will peak on fears and concerns over regulations and court rulings. Then, we will see peak dividends, said the Aramco executive. Aramco pays the highest annual dividend of $75bn. Over the past five years, the IEA has been predicting a large oil shortage and an oil price spike due to a lack of investments following a 2014-2017 oil price crash. An oil price rally coupled with the declining strength of oil majors would mean a large wealth transfer from the West to countries like Russia and Saudi Arabia, until demand starts declining not only in the West but in Asia too. The same oil and gas will still be produced. Just with lower ESG standards, said an executive from a Middle Eastern producer, who previously worked for an oil major, referring to environmental, social and governance performance measurements.