Business Day

Oil price to upset climate fight

• The cost of developing renewable energy projects will drop if central banks try to nurse economies back to health with sustained low benchmark interest rates

- David Fickling Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering commoditie­s, as well as industrial and consumer companies. ●

For those awaiting more aggressive action on climate change, it may look like a breaking point has finally arrived. A sudden collapse in fossil-fuel markets akin to the 2008 financial crisis has long been a scenario for how the world switches to a less carboninte­nsive path.

For those awaiting more aggressive action on climate change, it may look like a breaking point has finally arrived.

A sudden collapse in fossilfuel markets akin to the 2008 financial crisis has long been a scenario for how the world switches to a less carboninte­nsive path. With Brent crude trading below $35 and the average yield on the US energy sector’s junk debt above 15% — nearly double its levels in midJanuary — it looks very much like a credit crunch is upon us.

At the same time, there’s reason to be fearful, too. Russia’s finance ministry has said it could sustain oil prices below $30 for as long as a decade. Setting aside a brief dip in the late 1990s, dollar crude hasn’t been at those levels in real terms since the 1973 oil crisis.

In theory, that should be bullish for consumers of oil and bearish for purported substitute­s, such as electric vehicles.

The real effect is likely to be more nuanced — and positive for decarbonis­ation.

A key factor to bear in mind is that global downturns almost always throttle energy consumptio­n. There have only been six periods in the past half century when annual energy demand growth has fallen below 1% on a sustained basis, and four of them resulted from slowdowns like the one we seem to be witnessing.

That’s only going to be a temporary help, since recessions don’t so much slow the pace of emissions growth as defer the pre-existing path for a few years. But there’s reason to think that this time really will be different.

For one thing, unlike the solar panels that Jimmy Carter installed on the White House roof after the 1979 oil crisis, decarbonis­ed alternativ­es are viable substitute­s for fossil-fired energy now.

Take electric vehicles. Intuitivel­y, Monday’s 24% drop in crude prices looks like obvious bad news for battery-powered transport. That overestima­tes how sensitive car buyers are to the price of fuel rather than that of the vehicle itself, though.

The running cost for electric vehicles in the US is already less than half that of convention­al cars. But as anyone who’s been into a Tesla showroom knows, not even subsidies have been enough to make driveaway prices competitiv­e with equivalent petrol- or dieselpowe­red vehicles.

We’re not likely to hit price parity on that front until battery packs drop below $100/kWh in the middle of this decade, according to BloombergN­EF.

Most people buying electric cars right now are either green consumers who aren’t likely to flip back to petrol because the price of crude is low, or commercial users whose fuel and maintenanc­e savings will be substantia­l enough that they’re unlikely to switch in a hurry.

Other segments of the oil barrel, such as the diesel and paraffin being used for powering ships and aircraft, as well as naphtha and ethane for making plastics, are likely to show even less response to the price crash. For several decades now, demand for oil has shown low and declining sensitivit­y to how much a barrel costs.

Another place where upfront expenditur­es are important is in the power industry. Wind and solar don’t use fuel, so the price of generation projects is unusually sensitive to one of the main early-stage costs: debt. One study in 2019 comparing the drivers of solar power profitabil­ity in Europe found that lowering capital costs had almost as dramatic an effect as moving the project from Helsinki to Malaga in Spain, which gets about 50% more sunlight.

That’s good news for renewable project developers. The government bond prices that form the bedrock of borrowing costs are in uncharted territory, with 30-year US treasuries yielding less than 1% on Monday and the yield on 10-year German debt at a record low -0.856%. Right now, that flight-to-quality trade is still causing yields on corporate debt to spike, but if low benchmark interest rates become sustained as central banks try to nurse economies back to health, the cost of developing renewable projects will likely be lower for longer.

The major risk to this picture is how government­s respond to the economic crisis, particular­ly in China. As we’ve written, Beijing has a habit of reaching for dirty industrial stimulus whenever growth is looking weak. That’s largely what reversed an unusual period in 2014 and 2015 when global emissions declined in spite of economic growth.

The world will almost certainly need help from its government­s to recover from the crisis. If the medicine they use is as dirty as China’s attempts at stimulus over the past decade, the systemic crisis for fossil fuels won’t be so much averted as deferred to a later date.

RECESSIONS DON’T SO MUCH SLOW THE PACE OF EMISSIONS GROWTH AS DEFER THE PRE-EXISTING PATH FOR A FEW YEARS

FOR SEVERAL DECADES, DEMAND FOR OIL HAS SHOWN LOW AND DECLINING SENSITIVIT­Y TO HOW MUCH A BARREL COSTS

 ?? /AFP ?? Keeping cars on the road: The Marathon petrol refinery in Carson, California. Global oil prices rebounded on March 10 on hopes of US economic stimulus efforts, one day after suffering their biggest losses in more than a decade.
/AFP Keeping cars on the road: The Marathon petrol refinery in Carson, California. Global oil prices rebounded on March 10 on hopes of US economic stimulus efforts, one day after suffering their biggest losses in more than a decade.

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