BP boss vows net zero emissions by 2050

Steven Mufson

Feb 13, 2020

AFR

BP, the world’s fifth-largest oil-and-gas company, said on Wednesday (Thursday AEDT) that it would slash its own greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050 and gradually shift its investments into energy projects that do not emit carbon dioxide.

The company said it would cut the carbon content of the products it sells by 50 per cent by 2050 by selling products that aren’t fossil fuels or by offsetting production with carbon capture tools.

The BP boss said the company’s pledge to achieve net zero carbon emissions assumes that it would still produce oil and gas, with those emissions offset by technologies that might suck carbon dioxide from the air.

It also said it would install methane measurement equipment at all its processing sites by 2023 so it can cut leakage.

Carbon dioxide and methane are two gases that have contributed to a warming climate, scientists say.

The plan would change the focus of the 110-year-old company. And the amount of carbon dioxide emissions BP intends to eliminate would roughly equal the emissions of Britain.

“Make no mistake: We aim to invest more and more in low-carbon businesses over time and by consequence less and less in oil and gas,” BP’s new chief executive, Bernard Looney, said in a webcast from London.

The company’s pledge to achieve net zero carbon emissions assumes that it would still produce oil and gas, with those emissions offset by technologies that might suck carbon dioxide from the air. The net zero calculation does not include BP’s one-fifth share of Rosneft, one of the biggest Russian oil companies.

And the BP plan does not extend to emissions generated by its customers, such as when people drive cars that burn BP gasoline. For oil companies, that accounts for 85 per cent of emissions.

But Looney said that by reducing the amount of oil and gas it extracts from the ground, those emissions would also fall steeply. And he noted that BP’s exploration budget had already dropped by two-thirds since 2013.

“BP’s announcement is important because it promises to bring the emissions from the use of all the oil and gas it produces to net zero, not just reduce the carbon intensity of what it sells. That can’t be achieved just with some trees and offsets,” said Jason Bordoff, founder and head of Columbia University’s global energy center.

“It means BP is fundamentally promising to become a completely different kind of energy company by 2050,” he said. “Now we need its actions to live up to its promises.”

Game changing

Pavel Molchanov, senior energy analyst at the investment firm Raymond James, called the announcement “game-changing in terms of scale. BP has become the first supermajor – and, as such, the largest oil-and-gas company – to set a net zero target for carbon emissions.”

He said that BP has joined a “still-small but growing list of top-tier hydrocarbon producers that have committed to carbon neutrality.” While the company has yet to offer details about its transition, “the target itself marks an important first step”, Mochanov said.

Looney’s announcement comes nearly 10 years after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, which forced the company to divest itself of about $US70 billion of its oil-and-gas assets.

“We have got to change and change profoundly,” Looney. “I get it. The world does have a carbon budget, and it is running out fast.” He said that “society has to deliver on the Paris goals” set out in the 2015 climate agreement. President Donald Trump has said he would withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accord.

The BP chief executive spoke in a webcast whose audience included security analysts; John Browne, former BP chief executive who had tried to steer BP “beyond petroleum”; Stephen Pacala, a Princeton University professor and climate scientist; and by phone, Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defence Fund.

Looney said that the trillions of dollars required for “rewiring and replumbing” the world’s energy infrastructure over the next three decades provided plenty of projects in which BP could invest.

“Some see that as a threat, a threat to our existence,” Looney said. “I see it differently. I see opportunity.” The company has already tapped its prodigious cash flow from oil-and-gas operations to make substantial investments in renewable energy areas, including Lightsource BP, a leading developer of utility-scale solar projects.

But Looney acknowledged that BP “is going to be in the oil-and-gas business for a very long time” because of the commitments it has to governments and shareholders, including about $US8 billion a year in dividends.

Yet BP shareholders have already indicated support for climate action. At their annual meeting in May, shareholders overwhelmingly approved a climate resolution that called for the company to meet the Paris climate goals.

The resolution, co-filed by shareholder group Climate Action 100+ and backed by the company, won the support of 99.14 percent of the votes. Climate Action 100+ is a group of relatively modest investors.

Joining other companies

A second resolution, which urged BP to reduce the emissions from the use of its products was opposed by the company and defeated.

Even as the Trump administration and US lawmakers struggle over forging a climate plan, BP joins other companies vowing to make deep cuts in energy use.

Last week, Dominion Energy announced a goal to achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, joining at least 17 other US utilities that are setting net zero targets.

Dominion’s goal applies to both its electric and natural gas businesses in the 18 states where it operates.

Looney also said that BP would seek to alter the positions of some trade associations to which it belongs. If that fails, he said the company would withdraw from those groups.

This has been a major source of dispute with environmental groups, which have cited BP’s heavy spending campaign in Washington state in 2018 to defeat a modest carbon tax there, as well as its membership in the American Petroleum Institute.

“We will have new relationships with trade associations,” Looney said. “We will make the case for our views on climate change. . . . And where we can’t reach alignment, we will leave.”

Washington Post

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