The Fossil Fuel Industry has Reason to be Nervous
(editor’s note: this piece
originally appeared in the Green Market Oracle)
“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” – Mahatma Gandhi
Concerns about climate change,
the demise of coal and the rise of renewable energy are making the fossil fuel
industry nervous. While the fossil fuel industry initially dismissed the
divestment movement, it’s size and scope give them reason to be fearful.
The fossil fuel industry has a
lot of skin in the game. In 2013 alone they spent $670 billion looking for more
coal, oil and gas reserves. All of this will be worthless as we begin to
seriously decrease our consumption of fossil fuels.
ExxonMobil’s vice president of
public and government affairs, Ken Cohen, said the divestment movement is “simply … out of step with reality.”
The science indicates
that Cohen is dead wrong. There have been a vast number of warnings coming from
a wide variety of sources including, AGU, IEA, IPCC, PwC, World Bank, and the World Meteorological Organization, stating that our
current emissions trajectory is catastrophic.
These realizations have prompted
former CEO of BP, Lord John Browne, to say that climate change poses an
“existential threat” to the industry.
Attack
To counter the divestment
movement, the fossil fuel industry has launched a coordinated smear campaign
full of lies and misinformation. Their self-described “win ugly or lose pretty”
tactics have castigated those who advocate divestment as “anti-energy” radicals,
who want to deprive people of electricity, technology, and even food.
The coal industry is in decline
and it is lashing out as it sees the end draw near. The Australian coal
industry has attacked institutional investors, universities and churches that
have decided to divest.
The then CEO of the Australian Coal Association, Nikki
Williams, called divestment campaigners “anti-development activists attempting
to bludgeon society” with “a new morality of industrial sabotage.”
To prove its desperation, Shell
even intimated that there could be legal sanctions against Australian National
University’s (ANU) divestment announcement. Even Australian Prime Minister Tony
Abbott resorted to name calling when he denounced ANU’s decision, referring to
it as “stupid”.
In a keynote speech at the
International Petroleum Week dinner in London on February 12, Shell CEO
Ben van Beurden called fossil fuel critics “naive” and “impractical”.
Concessions
In his speech, van Beurden
conceded that Big Oil has “credibility issue” because the fossil fuel industry
has been slow to accept the reality of global warming. “Yes, climate change is
real. And yes, renewables are an indispensable part of the future energy mix,”
van Beurden said. He also said that the oil industry should not only accept the
existence of climate change, it should also support a carbon pricing scheme.
“You cannot talk credibly about lowering emissions globally if, for example, you are slow to acknowledge climate change; if you undermine calls for an effective carbon price; and if you always descend into the ‘jobs v environment’ argument in the public debate.”
Shell is not only feeling
pressure from the outside, its own shareholders voted for a resolution in which
they call for the company to disclose the company’s climate change risks.
Energy companies are getting
nervous and this is has forced them to make concessions. Case in point, utility
giant NRG recently announced its goal of 90 percent emissions reductions by
2050.
NRG’s chief executive, David Crane, is doing everything he can to address
the changing social climate. He knows that the future looks bleak for companies
like his. “I don’t relish the idea that year after year we’re going to be
graduating a couple million kids from college,” Crane said, “with a distaste or
disdain for companies like mine.”
Now even those responsible for
the problem are being forced to acknowledge the facts. A recent BP report acknowledged
that the current emissions trajectory is unsustainable and a carbon pricing
scheme is required.
Countering misinformation
The fossil fuel industry’s
subterfuge is increasingly being exposed. In December, Shell’s chief climate
change advisor was slated to present a panel, cosponsored by Chevron, entitled,
“Why Divest from Fossil Fuels When a Future with Low-Emission Fossil Energy Use
Is Already a Reality?”
However, due to pressure, the
discussion title was changed to “How Can We Reconcile Climate Targets with
Energy Demand Growth?” Despite the name change, the event was greeted by
protestors in front of the private pavilion of the International Emissions
Trading Association, which was sponsored by Shell and Chevron.
While the fossil fuel industry
would like us to believe there is no future without hydrocarbons, there is
growing evidence that this is simply not the case. A March study by venture
capitalist firm DBL
Investors squarely refutes the lies put
forth by the fossil fuel lobby suggesting that renewables will drive up the
price of electricity. DBL’s research indicates that states that employ electric
power produced by renewable energy have lower electricity costs than those that
do not.
A report titled, Photovoltaic (PV) Pricing
Trends: Historical, Recent, and Near-Term Projections, indicates that solar energy is also becoming
increasingly competitive with fossil fuels. A report from the United Arab
Emirates, the epicenter of fossil fuels, heralds the ascendency of renewable
energy.
The report from the Bank of Abu
Dhabi titled, Financing the Future of Energy,
states that the cost of solar PV has come down more than 80 percent since 2008.
The cost of wind energy has declined by almost 60 percent in the last
several years and wind turbines are now 15 times more efficient than they were
in the 1990s.
A DoE study revealed that wind could be directly
competitive with fossil fuels by 2025 and provide more than one third of US
energy demand by 2050.
Investors
Renewable energy investments are
gaining momentum and offering powerful rates of return that far exceed those
from the fossil fuel industry. The “Financing the Future of Energy,” report
indicates that in the last five years, there has been around $260 billion a
year invested in renewable-energy technology, representing more than half of
all global energy investments. It further states that as investments in fossil
fuels decline, there will be a 39 percent increase in renewable-energy
investment between 2013 and 2018.
The fossil fuel industry is
getting panicky as it watches investors peel away from fossil fuels and move
towards renewable sources of energy. Investor and former Shell economist Jeremy Grantham, wrote a letter titled “The Beginning
of the End of the Fossil Fuel Revolution” in which he said, “investors know
that fossil fuels will be replaced by renewable energy”.
The Independent Petroleum
Association of America is pushing back by publishing facetious, self-serving
reports like, “Fossil Fuel Divestment: A Costly and Ineffective Investment
Strategy.”
This report suggests that
portfolios with fossil fuel stock under perform. However a number of other
studies suggest that eliminating fossil fuel stocks has a negligible impact on
returns, and may even have a positive impact.
This is the conclusion of a
number of reports including research from MSCI, Advisor Partners, Impax, Aperio
Group, S&P Capital IQ, BNEF and an aptly named Northstar Asset Management
report titled, “The Cost of Fossil Fuel Divestment Has Been Greatly
Exaggerated.”
While oil industry stocks may
have performed well over the last 50 years, they have under-performed in the
last 5-10 years. There is every reason to believe that concerns about carbon
pricing, the removal of subsidies,carbon budgets, stranded assets and carbon
bubbles will continue to put downward pressure on the ROI of
fossil fuel investments.
Fossil fuel companies are
nervous because we are witnessing the beginning of the end of dirty energy.
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Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.
Richard Matthews is a consultant, eco-entrepreneur, green investor and author of numerous articles on sustainable positioning, eco-economics and enviro-politics. He is the owner of The Green Market Oracle, a leading sustainable business site and one of the Web’s most comprehensive resources on the business of the environment. Find The Green Market on Facebook and follow The Green Market’s twitter feed.