The
leaders of oil companies themselves do not believe in keeping future
emmisions to 2C
“A
paper used for guiding future business planning at (Shell) assumes
that carbon dioxide emissions will fail to limit temperature
increases to 2C, the internationally agreed threshold to prevent
widespread flooding, famine and desertification.”
Shell
accused of strategy risking catastrophic climate change
Environmentalists
say presumption of global temperature rise to 4C undermines
multinational’s ability to talk with authority on climate change
17
May, 2015
Royal
Dutch Shell has been accused of pursuing a strategy that would lead
to potentially catastrophic climate change after an internal document
acknowledged a global temperature rise of 4C, twice the level
considered safe for the planet.
A
paper used for guiding future business planning at the Anglo-Dutch
multinational assumes that carbon dioxide emissions will fail to
limit temperature increases to 2C, the internationally agreed
threshold to prevent widespread flooding, famine and desertification.
Instead,
the New Lens Scenarios document refers to a forecast by the
independent International Energy Agency (IEA) that points to a
temperature rise of up to 4C in the short term, rising later to 6C.
The
revelations come ahead of the annual general meeting of Shell
shareholders in the Netherlands on Tuesday, where the group has
accepted a shareholder resolution demanding more transparency about
the group’s impact on climate change.
Hundreds
of environmentalists took to the seas off Seattle in kayaks, canoes
and paddleboards on Sunday to protest against the company’s’s
controversial plans to drill in the Arctic Ocean. The “Shell No”
protest was held close to where Shell’s Polar Pioneer drilling rig
is docked. One banner read: “We can’t burn all the oil on the
planet and still live on it.”
Ben
van Beurden, the Shell chief executive, has repeatedly stated that
the fossil fuel giant is a responsible company that fully accepts the
need to counter manmade global warming, has campaigned for a tax on
greenhouse gas emissions, and is moving its focus from oil to cleaner
fuels such as gas.
But
an analysis of Shell’s New Lens planning document points to an
acceptance that world temperatures will rise to a level that the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change argues would have a severe
and widespread impact. A 4C global rise by 2100 would entail a sea
level rise of between 52cm and 98cm, leading to widespread coastal
flooding. There would be widespread risk of animal and plant
extinctions and global agriculture would be severely hit. A 4C
average would also mask more severe local impacts: the Arctic and
western and southern Africa could experience warming up to 10C.
The
Shell document says: “Both our (oceans and mountains) scenarios and
the IEA New Policies scenario (and our base case energy demand and
outlook) do not limit emissions to be consistent with the
back-calculated 450 parts per million (Co2 in the atmosphere) 2
degrees C.”
It
adds: “We also do not see governments taking steps now that are
consistent with 2 degrees C scenario.”
Environmentalists
said the presumptions undermine Shell’s ability to talk with
authority on climate change.
Charlie
Kronick, climate campaigner at campaign group Greenpeace, said Shell
and IEA saw fossil fuels continuing to be burned, with the earth
facing temperature rises of 3.7°C or 4°C in the short term,
mounting to 6°C later on.
“What
I don’t see is a realisation from Shell about what exactly would
happen to its business if climate change escalated dramatically
beyond what is safe with all the negative consequences in the world
for food and water never mind energy,” said Kronick.
Louise
Rouse, an investor relations specialist and consultant to Greenpeace,
said the New Lens document undermined Shell’s claim that ongoing
oil and gas exploration helps raise living standards in the
developing world by supplying the energy for rapidly expanding
economies.
“There
is an incoherence at best between oil companies on the one hand
positioning themselves as being on the side of the world’s
developing countries and while on the other actively pursuing
strategies which will entail catastrophic climate change which we
already know is having a significant impact on the global south,”
she said.
Friends
of the Earth in the Netherlands, which has carried out its own review
of activities by the Anglo-Dutch oil group, said the company often
argues that it is moving away from oil towards cleaner gas but has
often concentrated on the most carbon intensive forms of gas such as
liquefied natural gas.
Shell’s
carbon dioxide emissions have risen in 2014 and are set to increase
further as it expands the business through a planned £47bn takeover
of rival BG.
Shell
declined to comment formally on the New Lens scenarios but oil
industry experts said they were not meant to be a business blueprint.
Instead, they represent “plausible assumptions and quantification”
designed to make executives consider events that may be only remotely
possible. The expert added: “Scenarios are not intended to be
predictions of likely future events or outcomes.”
The
Guardian’s Keep it in the Ground campaign seeks to persuade the
Wellcome Trust and the Gates Foundation to divest themselves of their
shareholdings in fossil fuel companies. According to the latest
figures, Wellcome held a stake of £142m in Shell as of September
2014. The Gates Foundation held £6m of Shell’s shares at the time
of its latest tax filing in 2013.
The
Anglo-Dutch group said the BG takeover would expand its presence in
controversial deep-water activities – many of the planet’s
untapped fossil fuel resources are now in ocean regions that are
difficult to access – but said it would also increase its presence
in liquefied natural gas, a cleaner fossil fuel than oil.
It
added: “By combining BG’s portfolio and skills set with Shell’s
capabilities, we can deliver a step change in the growth priorities
for both of our companies. This means more deep water and more LNG,
plays where we have strong profitability and capabilities.”
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