Fossil Fuel Lobby Makes its Case in Bonn

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While the UN climate talks seek to slow climate change, the fossil fuel lobby still argues the benefits of traditional fuels, reports Kieran Cooke, a founding editor of Climate News Network.

The fossil fuel lobby is still at it. The advocates of traditional fuelsย  are determined to push their case atย the climate change talkshere โ€“ even though all the evidence says thatย the continued use of coal, oil and gas threatens severe climate changeย and the whole future of theย planet.

According to a new report those lobbyists are not only endangering future generations โ€“ they are also digging a deep financial hole for themselves, virtually throwing away multi-million dollarย investments.

Theย reportย byย Carbon Tracker,ย an independent financial think-tank specialising in the energy sector, looks specifically at the oil-refining sector and has some distinctly uncomfortable news for investors in theย industry.

It says that by 2035 a growing tide of climate regulations, along with rapid advances in clean technologies, will lead to big cuts in the demand for oil and result in at least a quarter of the worldโ€™s more than 500 refineries having toย close.

โ€œMany players will exit the market rather than haemorrhage cashโ€, says Andrew Grant, a co-author of the report. โ€œInvestors should beware that the risk of wasting capital extends to all new investments, including expansions or upgrades to existingย facilities.โ€

Refineries hitย 

The thousands of delegates at the meeting here โ€“ referred to asย the Conference of the Parties, or the COPย โ€“ are discussing ways to ensure that average world temperatures do not rise to more than 2ยฐC above pre-industrial levels, beyond which catastrophic climate change is, say many scientists,ย inevitable.

Carbon Tracker says that if the world is serious about keeping within the 2ยฐC target, oil use will have to be radically cut back and the oil refining sector, which demands high levels of investment capital, will be especially hardย hit.

The least profitable refineries will go out of business. Earnings for the industry as a whole could halve by 2035 as a result of less oil beingย processed.

Analysing the workings of 492 refineries around the world โ€“ representing more than 90% of global refining capacity โ€“ the report says tens of billions of dollars of investment are atย risk.

Earningsย plunge

More than 20% of the worldโ€™s refineries are unprofitable at present, says Carbon Tracker; it forecasts that some of the biggest players in the oil business, such asย Total,ย Eni,ย Shellย andย Chevron,ย are likely to see earnings from refining drop by between 60% and 80% byย 2035.

The fossil fuel industry refutes such analysis. Buoyed by a recent surge in the oil price โ€“ due in part toย the political turmoil under way in Saudi Arabia,ย the worldโ€™s biggest oil exporter โ€“ oil companies see demand growing steadily in the yearsย ahead.

The 2ยฐC target on limiting the global temperature rise wasย agreed by nearly 200 countries at the Paris COPย in late 2015.ย The US administration of President Trump โ€“ he has describedย ย climate change as a hoax โ€“ recently announced that it would be withdrawing from the Parisย accord.

Earlier this weekย Syria agreed to join the Paris Agreement,ย leaving the US as the only country in the world at present refusing to acknowledge the climateย deal.

โ€œIt is undeniable that fossil fuels will be used for the foreseeable future. And itโ€™s in everyoneโ€™s interest that they be efficient andย cleanโ€

Negotiations on the US withdrawal will take some time; in the interim,ย Washington is sending a delegation along with a large group of fossil fuel lobbyistsย to the Bonnย meeting.ย 

Demonstrations against the US are likely: already there have beenย street protests against Germanyโ€™s continued use of coalย โ€“ the most polluting of fossil fuels โ€“ forย much of its power.ย 

While someย US states, cities and other bodiesย will be telling the meeting in Bonn that they continue to support international efforts to combat climate change and limit fossil fuel use, the Trump administration says coal, oil, gas โ€“ and nuclear โ€“ will remain at the heart of energy generation for years toย come.

โ€œIt is undeniable that fossil fuels will be used for the foreseeable futureโ€ says a White House spokesman. โ€œAnd itโ€™s in everyoneโ€™s interest that they be efficient andย clean.โ€

This article was cross-posted from the Climate Newsย Network

Photo: Walter Siegmund via Wikimedia Commons | CC2.0

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