Windsor Star

AN INSATIABLE THIRST

Can the world kick its oil habit? Judging from our consumptio­n rate, the answer is no

- ANJLI RAVAL

The whole of human prosperity and wealth has been based on our exploitati­on of oil and other fossil fuels . ... The problem is absolutely immense.

A 45-minute helicopter ride over aquamarine waters, 240 kilometres west of Abu Dhabi, brings you to the Ruwais refinery. Perched along the coast, the labyrinth of pipes that form the vast oil processing complex seems to emerge directly out of the sand.

The United Arab Emirates, which has some of the world’s cheapest-to-extract crude oil, produces about three million barrels a day (b/d), making it one of the world’s biggest producers (the U.S., at No. 1, produces 13 million).

Most of the UAE’S output is piped to oil tankers, which criss-cross oceans to deliver barrels to customers. But about a quarter is refined domestical­ly, at places such as Ruwais, where crude is distilled into products that have become vital to our modern existence: petrol for cars, diesel for trucks and jet fuel that propels aircraft.

The world runs on oil. The dark, often viscous liquid is the single biggest contributo­r to the world’s energy mix, at 34 per cent of consumptio­n, followed by coal at 27 per cent and natural gas at 24 per cent. But the fossil fuel has also quietly seeped into other aspects of our lives: from paint, washing detergents and nail polish to plastic packaging, medical equipment, mattress foams, clothing and coatings for television screens.

Last year, global demand reached a record 100 million barrels a day, driven in part by the needs of rapidly industrial­izing emerging markets. This is why Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) that operates Ruwais, is spending US$45 billion to expand the country’s refining and petrochemi­cal capabiliti­es.

“We are doubling our refining capacity,” Jaber told foreign oil executives and reporters at the company ’s headquarte­rs last year. “No one in the region or in the industry at large is undertakin­g such a massive expansion.”

Even as our thirst for oil seems insatiable, it is becoming politicall­y and environmen­tally toxic. As the world wakes up to the catastroph­ic impact of climate change, from rising sea levels and drought to wildfires and crop failure, scientists have warned of a need to rapidly shift away from fossil fuels.

Yet when it comes to oil demand, there is little sign of this happening. Our usage has jumped 62 per cent over the course of a few decades — up from 61.6 million b/d in 1986. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) forecasts that if government­s continue with current policies, global demand will reach 121 million b/d by 2040.

How the world can provide abundant energy supplies while dramatical­ly reducing emissions has become one of the defining issues of our time. The challenge is huge. In order to keep global warming “well below” a 2 C increase, the IEA says the world would need to stomach a fall in oil consumptio­n to 67 million b/d by 2040. Environmen­t analysts argue that we need to learn to survive on far lower levels — about 10 million b/d — and ultimately remove it from our energy system entirely.

Government­s are beginning to take some action, from incentiviz­ing the purchase of low emissions vehicles to funding cleaner energy research. But the climate protesters scaling oil rigs, defacing energy company headquarte­rs and denouncing the banks that fund crude production face considerab­le opposition.

While coal and gas are starting to be displaced by lower-cost renewables in electricit­y generation, oil has a strangleho­ld over the transport sector, and the petrochemi­cals industry is a fast-growing consumer of refined products.

Aside from the commercial interests of oil-producer nations and corporatio­ns, there is a practical question: How will the world function without a material on which we depend so deeply? Do alternativ­es exist for its myriad, and often invisible, uses? And can any drop in oil usage happen quickly enough?

“The whole of human prosperity and wealth has been based on our exploitati­on of oil and other fossil fuels, so it is an almighty undertakin­g. To just remove them from our energy system within a decade or two is completely fanciful,” says Kingsmill Bond, a strategist at think-tank Carbon Tracker, which is calling on government­s and financial institutio­ns to align themselves with a low-carbon economy. “The problem is absolutely immense. But humanity is capable of spectacula­r achievemen­ts.”

Throughout history, energy has been at the heart of how civilizati­ons have prospered. For centuries, people burned wood for warmth and for cooking. In the 19th century, coal emerged as the preferred fuel and enabled industrial­ization. But it was in the early 20th century that crude oil — plants and animals that lived millions of years ago, compressed deep undergroun­d — propelled the mass transit of people and goods, fostered modern lifestyles and enabled higher standards of living than ever before.

Yet humanity’s improved well-being has come at the expense of the planet’s. The earth has warmed by 1 C since pre-industrial times and is likely to heat up by another 2 C by the turn of the century — overshooti­ng the targets of the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

A 2018 UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report showed warming beyond 1.5 C risked irreversib­le changes — from the mass extinction of species to extreme weather and ecosystem changes that threaten global stability. History does not inspire confidence in humanity’s ability to wean itself off particular energies. Even after the world began moving from coal to other fuels, coal did not disappear. With the emergence of each new source, we have simply added it to the mix rather than replace old ones.

“It usually takes 70 years for energy transition­s, such as the one from wood to coal, to happen at a natural speed. We need to see a greater magnitude of change, in fewer than 30 years,” says Nick Stansbury, head of commodity research at Legal & General Investment Management, where he helps oversee $1.3 trillion in funds.

“We need to make a bigger change, twice as fast as it has ever happened before. This is no way going to be easy.”

Climate activists argue that, unlike before, it is now a matter of urgency. Yet the IEA — the industry standard-bearer, which itself has been criticized for being too fossil fuel-friendly — has warned that even if government­s meet existing targets, carbon emissions are set to rise through to 2040.

Greta Thunberg, the 17-yearold Swedish activist, argued last month that commitment­s by companies and cities towards “net” zero emissions in several decades’ time were useless. They needed to fall, not break even.

“We need real zero,” she said. Cars, trucks and other road vehicles make up more than 40 per cent of global oil usage. When you add in aircraft, ships and trains, transport accounts for about 60 per cent. So any attempt to reduce our oil habit hinges on this sector.

Predicting how soon the world’s fuel habits will change is something that energy chief executives such as Ben van Beurden at Royal Dutch Shell are agonizing over.

“You could have one scenario that says, oil and gas is going to very quickly peak now,” he says.

“It will become a diminishin­g percentage of the energy mix ... but you can also go too early and too fast in investing in the (alternativ­e) energy of the future.”

He believes that prematurel­y giving up on oil and gas “is just not a smart strategy.”

Two other sectors that account for significan­t oil use are buildings and industry. This includes heating and cooking as well as oil used for constructi­on vehicles and industrial processes.

Some of these are easier to displace than others. Oil might be better than gas for an industrial boiler as it has a higher energy density, while the diesel in a forklift truck is easier to eliminate.

“We have a sense of the order in which we want to go — from easiest-to-reduce emissions to the hardest-to-abate,” says Jason Bordoff, who heads the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University.

For the most difficult to displace sectors, part of the answer might be massive investment in carbon capture technologi­es and offsets such as planting trees.

“Ultimately, the world has to make value judgments about what temperatur­e target it wants to hit,” Bordoff adds. “If we can stabilize warming at 2 C, it will be one of the greatest achievemen­ts in human history. But it’s not enough.”

BP started life in 1908 with an oil discovery in what was then Persia. Today, the company is rolling out electric charge points, sees itself as a player in renewable power and this week announced an ambition to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 or sooner. But for now it still generates the bulk of its profits from, and funnels most of its cash into, its legacy businesses.

In August, even as pressure in the west mounted for BP to demonstrat­e its low-carbon credential­s, the company announced it had agreed to form a petrol station network and aviation fuels business in India with Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries. Bob Dudley, BP’S then CEO, said: “India is set to be the world’s largest growth market for energy by the mid-2020s.”

BP is not alone in pursuing new oil consumers in developing countries as demand begins to stagnate elsewhere. France’s Total and the state energy giant Saudi Aramco are among foreign companies seeking a foothold in India as they bank on the country’s swelling middle classes to drive consumptio­n.

This points to a broader dilemma. Should countries that have not yet fully industrial­ized — where hundreds of millions of people endure poverty and a lack of basic infrastruc­ture — not enjoy the same fossil-fuelled developmen­t the west took advantage of? How much of the burden of reducing our oil habit should these markets be expected to shoulder?

The world’s addiction to oil is often compared with tobacco. But while smoking is something people can choose to do, using energy is not. Mohammed Barkindo, secretary-general of OPEC, the oil exporters’ cartel, said in a recent speech: “The almost one billion people worldwide who currently lack access to electricit­y and the three billion without modern fuels for cooking are not just statistics on a page. They are real people . ... Nobody should be left behind.”

Some oil analysts, such as Christyan Malek at U.S. bank Jpmorgan, believe the reduction of tens of trillions of dollars in new oil investment­s amid a backlash against fossil fuels could create an “acute shortfall” in supplies and set oil prices on course to hit $100 a barrel.

“The cost of energy will escalate if we can’t replace it with renewables and other non-oil sources quickly enough,” he says. “This will hurt western consumers ... and, not least, emerging-market countries that can’t function without lowcost energy.”

Yet the cost of climate change could be far greater — and the world is running out of time. The IEA’S “sustainabl­e developmen­t scenario” charts a way for the globe to avoid a temperatur­e rise of more than 2 C while simultaneo­usly guaranteei­ng widespread access to energy. But the agency is clear: this outcome would require “rapid and widespread changes across all parts of the energy system.”

Who, or what, will prove most effective at driving such change is yet to be seen. When the titans of global business and politics gathered in Davos last month, climate change was top of the agenda. Yet few could say how exactly the transition away from oil and other fossil fuels would take place.

Instead, U.S. president Donald Trump used his speech to assail environmen­tal “alarmists.” The demands of climate advocates, he told reporters, were “unrealisti­c, to a point you can’t live your lives.”

Despite the challenges, not everyone feels hopeless about the world’s chances of transformi­ng its energy future. Christiana Figueres was the Costa Rican diplomat who brought the leaders of 195 countries together in 2015 to sign the Paris agreement.

The image of her in a roll-neck sweater and checked blazer, holding raised hands with then UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, marked a high point for multilater­al efforts.

Figueres, who was the UN’S top climate change official between 2010 and 2016, remains relentless­ly positive. (She even leads an environmen­tal organizati­on called Global Optimism).

Although the 2019 climate talks in Madrid ended in disarray, she believes the prospect of cleaner air, better health outcomes, more livable cities and energy security will be enough to encourage government­s to keep the deal alive.

“I don’t demonize anyone,” she says by phone from Davos.

The blame game, she argues, is not helpful; countries dependent on the use of, or income from, fossil fuels are in a tougher place.

“The important thing is: how quickly do you move beyond your starting line?”

In London, some fund managers — such as Natasha Landell-mills — believe investors have a vital role to play in prodding corporatio­ns and government­s. Last year, Landell-mills’ company, Sarasin & Partners, which invests on behalf of charities, private clients and institutio­ns, sold just over 20 per cent of its shares in Shell.

In a letter to Shell’s chairman, she said its plans to grow oil and gas production were not aligned with global climate goals: “It cannot be in the interests of the millions of people whose long-term savings are invested in your company, for you to produce fossil fuels in such volume that planetary stability is threatened.”

Sarasin has since sold a further 30 per cent.

Diverting investment away from the fossil fuel industry — despite some companies being the biggest dividend payers in the world — is one way to curb its use and shift attitudes. The energy sector’s share of the S&P 500 today is already down to about four per cent, from more than 11 per cent in 2010. While pressure has largely been on the producers of fossil fuels, difficult-to-decarboniz­e industries, their financiers and auditors are also under scrutiny.

“I ask companies, ‘Can you commit your business to aligning with net-zero emissions by 2050?’ More often than not the answer is, ‘How do we do that when the future is so uncertain?’ ” Landellmil­ls says. “Yes it is uncertain, but climate change is accelerati­ng. So we all have a responsibi­lity to act . ... Capital should flow towards solutions to climate change rather than causes.”

Figueres argues that while it is not up to government­s to find the technologi­es to decarboniz­e the world, it is up to them to incentiviz­e their developmen­t — particular­ly carbon capture and storage solutions.

She believes states will be key to rolling out new energy infrastruc­ture and increasing taxes on carbon-intensive fuels.

“If government­s place a price on carbon and this is increased over time, this is a very important incentive to decarboniz­e,” she says.

Around the world, individual­s are taking to the streets and risking arrest to demand climate action, but their impact will depend on states and industries taking a lead. Figueres is encouraged by the signs that investors and corporatio­ns are beginning to act.

“Government­s have lost their mojo and have fallen behind compared to where companies are,” she says. “Every day, we see more and more companies and financial institutio­ns that understand the risk of high-carbon assets. No matter where you look, the movement is in that direction.”

Ft.com

If we can stabilize warming at 2 C, it will be one of the greatest achievemen­ts in human history. But it’s not enough.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Last year, global demand for oil was a record 100 million barrels daily. The Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. that operates the Ruwais refinery is spending US$45 billion to expand.
BLOOMBERG Last year, global demand for oil was a record 100 million barrels daily. The Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. that operates the Ruwais refinery is spending US$45 billion to expand.
 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., says the company plans on doubling its refining capacity.
BLOOMBERG Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., says the company plans on doubling its refining capacity.
 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Cars, trucks and other road vehicles make up more than 40 per cent of global oil usage. Add in aircraft, ships and trains and transport accounts for about 60 per cent of oil usage.
BLOOMBERG Cars, trucks and other road vehicles make up more than 40 per cent of global oil usage. Add in aircraft, ships and trains and transport accounts for about 60 per cent of oil usage.
 ??  ?? An Extinction Rebellion banner blocks the road to Trafalgar Square in London last October. The protest came weeks after millions took to the streets to urge leaders to take decisive action on climate change.
BLOOMBERG
An Extinction Rebellion banner blocks the road to Trafalgar Square in London last October. The protest came weeks after millions took to the streets to urge leaders to take decisive action on climate change. BLOOMBERG
 ??  ?? Greta Thunberg
Greta Thunberg

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