Big
Oil not only believes in global warming — they’ll profit from it
If
this winter’s polar vortexes and accidental Atlanta ice-skating
rinks have you doubting whether climate change is real, you’re not
alone. In a recent Yale survey, a record 23% of Americans now deny
the science.
1
February, 2014
But
take it from giant oil companies like ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch
Shell: You’re wrong.
Big
Oil not only believes in global warming, it’s factoring it into the
business plan. Consider Exxon’s enormous, already $3.2 billion
partnership with Russia’s Rosneft in the warming Arctic, where up
to a quarter of the planet’s undiscovered petroleum is thought to
be hiding — and where melting sea ice means easier access for drill
ships and oil tankers. In 2014, the partners plan to begin drilling
in the Kara Sea, north of Siberia, where last summer Russian security
forces boarded a Greenpeace icebreaker in a preamble to impounding it
and arresting its activists.
One
need only read Exxon’s website to know that the company that once
funneled tens of millions of dollars to climate skeptics has had a
change of heart: “ExxonMobil believes that it is prudent,” bold
letters now declare, “to develop and implement strategies that
address the risks to society associated with increasing [greenhouse
gas] emissions.”
An
internal, company-wide “shadow price” for carbon, $60 per metric
ton, helps Exxon identify which of its divisions are the biggest
polluters and most in need of improvement. Exxon has even quietly
proposed that the United States levy a carbon tax — not necessarily
out of love for the planet but because some form of greenhouse
regulation seems inevitable, and Exxon would like to shield its
shareholders from what it considers the worse fate of cap-and-trade.
Modal
Trigger
Shell
made headlines this week when it announced it was abandoning the
melting Alaskan Arctic after a series of accidents and legal
setbacks. But the size of the prize, an estimated 27 billion barrels
in the Alaskan continental shelf, may be too big for it to stay gone
forever. Executives have said that the high north will someday be
Shell’s No. 1 source of crude oil.
If
the company has been a pioneer in the Arctic, it has also been a
pioneer in recognizing climate reality. Along with BP, it was first
among the oil majors to publicly accept the science, and already by
the early 1980s it was incorporating warming and emissions into its
internal planning. “It seemed inevitable that we would
decarbonize,” says its head futurist at the time, Peter Schwartz,
“for many reasons, climate among them.”
This
is one reason Shell now produces more natural gas than oil. Gas still
warms the planet, but less so than oil or coal.
In
1998, another Shell futurist, Jeroen van der Veer, who would soon
become CEO, directed a formal, company-wide study of climate change’s
impacts on the oil giant’s global business. The result was an
in-house version of the Kyoto Protocol: a goal to reduce the
company’s own greenhouse-gas emissions by 10% by 2002, an internal
cap-and-trade scheme, a shadow carbon price, and a commitment to
evaluate projects on the basis of not only the profit they would make
but the carbon they would emit.
A
decade later, Shell publicly released two scenarios describing the
world up to 2050 — “Blueprints” and “Scramble” — that
explicitly warned of the dangers of climate change while also
foreseeing a massive boom in global energy demand.
For
the first time, Shell declared that it had a preferred scenario: The
greener, less emissions-intensive Blueprints offered the brighter
future, for the company and the planet. Van der Veer gave interviews:
It should be made expensive to emit carbon and other greenhouse
gases, he declared. Global cap-and-trade agreements were urgently
needed. Efficiency standards should be imposed. All this would
require more government regulation. “People always think . . . the
market will solve all of it,” he said. “That of course is
nonsense.”
What
went unsaid was that Shell would prepare for both scenarios. If the
world looked more like Scramble — no substantial emissions cuts and
a growing scramble for resources — Shell would be ready to
scramble, too.
Ultimately,
Shell’s embrace of climate science comes from the same place as
Exxon’s: Realism is good for shareholders.
In
public statements and private conversations, Shell officials continue
to acknowledge the following truths: Climate change is real. Climate
change is melting the Arctic. Ice-free seas are easier for shipping.
Ice-free seas are easier for spill cleanup. Ice-free seas are easier
for seismic survey, which, as the company website explains, “enables
explorers to see through solid matter in the same way an ultrasound
can see a baby inside its mother.” And in places like Alaska,
governments will allow oil drilling only during the ice-free summer,
a season that is lengthening year after year.
As
a Shell vice president once told a crowd of conference-goers, “I
will be one of those persons most cheering for an endless summer in
Alaska.”
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