Thirty percent of investments planned by oil and gas majors over the next decade could be wasted if the world economy retools to cap global warming at two degrees Celsius, researchers warned Wednesday.
The two-degree target is the cornerstone of the 196-nation Paris Agreement, inked in 2015. President Trump has announced the US is withdrawing from the agreement — warning it will hurt the country's economy — but other nations are proceeding to meet its goals.
The new report, "Two degrees of separation: Transition risk for upstream oil and gas in a low-carbon world," suggests some big energy companies are failing to adjust their businesses to meet the low-carbon economy required by the agreement — and could end up with problems as a result.
Up to 50 percent of ExxonMobil's proposed capital expenditure to 2025, for example, is allocated to uneconomical projects likely to disappoint shareholders, the researchers concluded.
Shell, Chevron, Total and Eni were found to have put 30 to 40 percent of future spending at risk, about average for the companies examined. All told, projects worth $2.3 trillion could become unprofitable as energy shifts toward renewables and if fossil fuel prices stagnate, according to an analysis of investment budgets for 69 publicly traded oil and gas companies.
At the other end of the scale, 14 companies — including state-owned giant Saudi Aramco — were seen as well-aligned with the "2C" scenario.
"This report is a real game-changer for the future of corporate-investor engagement," said Nathan Fabian, director of policy & research at PRI, a UN-backed network of investors who oversee $62 trillion in assets.
"Investors in oil and gas companies have been in the dark about their exposure to climate risk — now they will be able to confront companies with precise information."
PRI produced the report in collaboration with Carbon Tracker, a financial think tank that assesses the impact of climate change on capital markets and investment.
Major energy companies are already under growing pressure from investors to explain how global warming — and the shift to a low-carbon economy — will affect their bottom lines.
Last month, three-fifths of ExxonMobil shareholders defied the board and voted for the company to report annually on how new technology and 2C policies will affect business and investment plans.
Weeks earlier, a majority of Occidental Petroleum shareholders called for similar measures.
"There are clear signs that oil demand could peak in the early 2020s, so companies need to start taking options that would come onstream then off the table," said James Leaton, Carbon Tracker's research director.
"Sticking with the growth-at-all-costs scenario just doesn't add up for shareholder value when policy and technology are heading in the opposite direction."
The move towards corporate transparency around climate issues extends beyond the fossil fuel industry.
On June 29, the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures — initiated at the COP21 Paris climate summit by former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg and Bank of England Governor Mark Carney — will issue final recommendations.
The task force has already called for the disclosure of climate-related impacts and risks, and strategies to confront them — backed by metrics and targets.
The Carbon Tracker report on investment risk in the fossil fuel industry looks at oil and gas production to 2035, and capital investment to 2025.
The proposed projects would generate 380 billion tons of CO2 — 60 percent from oil, 40 percent from gas — by 2035, exceeding the fossil fuel "carbon budget" consistent with a 2C cap on global warming.
Companies will need to knock off at least 60 billion tonnes of that total for the world to have a 50/50 shot at a 2C world.
In a joint statement, institutional investors backing the report — including Britain's Legal & General Investment Management, Dutch pension fund PGGM, and the French fund FRR — cautioned against the risk of stranded assets.
"Some companies have to reconsider their business strategy," they said.
ExxonMobil, Total, Eni and Shell are all involved in the single biggest uneconomic asset flagged by the report, the $33.5 billion Kashagan Phase 2 project in Kazakhstan. Analysts estimate it would require oil prices of at least $110 a barrel to break even.
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