Berliner Boersenzeitung - Energy majors go slow on green transition despite pressure

EUR -
AED 4.322001
AFN 74.727613
ALL 95.854467
AMD 436.354081
ANG 2.106436
AOA 1080.353602
ARS 1633.925287
AUD 1.63109
AWG 2.11834
AZN 1.998266
BAM 1.964993
BBD 2.370823
BDT 144.429813
BGN 1.963116
BHD 0.44441
BIF 3501.146003
BMD 1.176856
BND 1.501546
BOB 8.13364
BRL 5.832854
BSD 1.177122
BTN 111.662209
BWP 15.996996
BYN 3.321708
BYR 23066.373667
BZD 2.367397
CAD 1.597223
CDF 2730.305896
CHF 0.917009
CLF 0.026941
CLP 1060.31161
CNY 8.035748
CNH 8.034206
COP 4303.326222
CRC 535.158251
CUC 1.176856
CUP 31.186679
CVE 111.209953
CZK 24.380927
DJF 209.150551
DKK 7.474476
DOP 69.904583
DZD 155.80518
EGP 62.920473
ERN 17.652837
ETB 184.766826
FJD 2.579781
FKP 0.866615
GBP 0.8639
GEL 3.15986
GGP 0.866615
GHS 13.174934
GIP 0.866615
GMD 86.500204
GNF 10329.856397
GTQ 8.992951
GYD 246.259888
HKD 9.221201
HNL 31.328052
HRK 7.534466
HTG 154.197118
HUF 362.0091
IDR 20366.666463
ILS 3.464463
IMP 0.866615
INR 111.579288
IQD 1541.681097
IRR 1547565.3762
ISK 143.846642
JEP 0.866615
JMD 184.442897
JOD 0.834335
JPY 184.408602
KES 152.026369
KGS 102.881321
KHR 4722.138141
KMF 494.279038
KPW 1059.171206
KRW 1727.04776
KWD 0.361636
KYD 0.98096
KZT 545.223315
LAK 25864.353505
LBP 105387.43694
LKR 376.206807
LRD 216.36481
LSL 19.606733
LTL 3.474949
LVL 0.711868
LYD 7.478885
MAD 10.867053
MDL 20.281349
MGA 4889.835397
MKD 61.804693
MMK 2471.395963
MNT 4213.5789
MOP 9.498222
MRU 47.062619
MUR 55.347863
MVR 18.188279
MWK 2049.48462
MXN 20.486682
MYR 4.672689
MZN 75.207001
NAD 19.606749
NGN 1617.964849
NIO 43.214488
NOK 10.880844
NPR 178.650944
NZD 1.989798
OMR 0.452379
PAB 1.177092
PEN 4.128058
PGK 5.107097
PHP 72.090067
PKR 328.048797
PLN 4.245754
PYG 7239.577057
QAR 4.288168
RON 5.204295
RSD 117.704128
RUB 87.9477
RWF 1720.563179
SAR 4.41348
SBD 9.472022
SCR 16.163657
SDG 706.704031
SEK 10.802518
SGD 1.496596
SHP 0.878642
SLE 28.98009
SLL 24678.073172
SOS 672.577132
SRD 44.082702
STD 24358.538984
STN 24.949343
SVC 10.300195
SYP 130.075989
SZL 19.606636
THB 38.113666
TJS 11.041052
TMT 4.12488
TND 3.39174
TOP 2.833587
TRY 53.158346
TTD 7.990128
TWD 37.183349
TZS 3065.709163
UAH 51.72203
UGX 4426.139755
USD 1.176856
UYU 46.944211
UZS 14048.724067
VES 575.029866
VND 31017.211447
VUV 139.817906
WST 3.219867
XAF 659.08808
XAG 0.01562
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.180511
XCG 2.121459
XDR 0.817913
XOF 659.626121
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.856328
ZAR 19.509878
ZMK 10593.116886
ZMW 21.98243
ZWL 378.947087
  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.84

    +0.09%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    23.29

    +0.69%

  • BCC

    -1.1500

    78.12

    -1.47%

  • BCE

    0.1050

    23.885

    +0.44%

  • RIO

    0.3500

    100.83

    +0.35%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1500

    62.6

    -1.84%

  • RYCEF

    0.5000

    16.3

    +3.07%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    89.04

    -0.56%

  • BP

    -0.9850

    46.395

    -2.12%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    58.78

    -0.03%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.06

    +0.54%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    51.79

    -1%

  • VOD

    0.3300

    16.13

    +2.05%

  • RELX

    -0.0100

    36.58

    -0.03%

  • AZN

    -2.6200

    184.75

    -1.42%

Energy majors go slow on green transition despite pressure
Energy majors go slow on green transition despite pressure / Photo: Hussein Faleh - AFP/File

Energy majors go slow on green transition despite pressure

Most oil majors are stepping up investment in green energy amid rising activist pressure but without abandoning fossil fuels, putting at risk reaching carbon neutrality in 2050.

Text size:

During the annual shareholders' meeting of British group Shell on Tuesday, activists shouted out "Go to hell Shell!"

BP got similar treatment, as did banking giant Barclays, which is accused of financing oil extraction.

French oil and gas company TotalEnergies will likely be targeted by activists at its shareholders' meeting on Friday.

Since 2021 the International Energy Agency (IEA) has called for a stop to new oil projects, to ensure the world meets the goal of keeping global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

But new oil fields continue to open.

- Not enough renewables investment -

The oil and gas industry, particularly in Europe, has set objectives to reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases that cause global warming.

While investments by oil and gas firms in renewable energies and carbon capture have increased, they remain a marginal amount of overall spending.

According to the IEA, such spending rose from one percent in 2020 to five percent of total expenditures by last year, still only representing a quarter of what energy firms paid out to shareholders.

European firms such as TotalEnergies and Equinor are doing better than their peers, but "their investment in clean energy is tiny compared to their capital expenditure on oil and gas expansion", said David Tong, global industry campaign manager at Oil Change International.

Other than renewables and carbon capture, energy firms also have expertise that could be put to use in the production of hydrogen, biogas, ethanol and low-carbon fuels, said Christophe McGlade, head of the IEA's energy supply unit.

"If they can direct more of their spending towards those technologies, that could really move the needle in terms of getting them to scale up, and getting the deployment levels we need to get on track with net zero," he said.

- Shift from oil to gas -

The emissions reduction efforts made by energy majors have concerned mostly their own operations, which represent only about 15 percent of their overall carbon footprint.

They have in particular been battling against methane leaks and reduced the burning of unwanted natural gas at oil fields.

Such measures have helped BP reduce its emissions by 41 percent from 2019 to 2022, and it has upped its 2030 target to a 50 percent reduction.

Even US oil majors, which have long resisted recognising the need to reduce emissions, have begun to do so. ExxonMobil plans to cut its proper emissions by a fifth by 2030, from 2016 levels.

But the bulk of the work is elsewhere: reducing the emissions from its products as they are burned in cars or furnaces, the so-called scope three indirect emissions that account for 85 percent of the sector's overall carbon footprint.

Reducing these implies lowering the use of oil, and eventually gas.

Yet oil and gas firms are not cutting investment in fossil fuel exploration and production. The IEA forecasts that it will rise this year to hit the 2019 pre-pandemic level.

BP announced earlier this year it is stepping up investment in oil and gas projects, knocking back its emissions reduction plans. Instead of a 35-40 percent drop in indirect emissions linked to its production by 2030, BP now targets a 20-30 percent reduction.

TotalEnergies plans to keep its indirect emissions steady this decade.

It also plans a shift from oil to gas. If oil accounted for 55 percent of sales in 2019, Total aims to reduce that to 30 percent this decade, with gas rising to half.

"The sector will be dominated by gas rather than oil by 2030," said Moez Ajmi, an energy expert at EY consulting firm.

For the IEA's McGlade, these forecasts by energy firms are revealing.

"If companies are banking on continued increases in oil and gas demand, they are implicitly assuming that we will not reach our net zero targets and not limit climate change," he said.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)