Gulf News

Big oil pushes gas as fossil fuel answer to global warming

WORLD’S BIGGEST ENERGY COMPANIES DELIVER MESSAGE AT WASHINGTON CONFERENCE

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To reduce emissions and provide affordable electricit­y, the world needs to burn more fossil fuels, not less. That’s the message being delivered by the world’s biggest energy companies at the World Gas Conference in Washington this week, where they championed natural gas as the fuel of the future, rather than one that simply bridges the gap toward renewables.

The world is facing the twin challenge of growing power supply — which Royal Dutch Shell Plc says needs to increase five times over the next 50 years — and reducing emissions to meet climate change targets. Energy companies see gas doing double duty: it has half the carbon emissions of coal when used in power generation, is abundant and relatively cheap.

The “big challenge for us in the industry is helping people recognise gas as a destinatio­n fuel, not just a transition fuel,” BP Plc Chief Executive Officer Bob Dudley said during a panel discussion. “There’s another camp, a surprising camp, that is intent on discrediti­ng gas as an option.”

It’s an argument that’s difficult to win with policymake­rs and the public, many of whom say that fossil fuels, including gas production facilities, are causing climate change and should be phased out, especially with wind, solar and battery technology making great strides in recent years. For all its relative cleanlines­s, gas producers still leak methane, which can be a more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

“Gas will not be a solution for poverty in a world where climate change is driving more people into poverty” if methane emissions continue, said Rachel Kyte, CEO and Special Representa­tive of the UN Secretary-General Sustainabl­e Energy for All. “Let’s not leave the room with the elephant still untouched.”

Energy companies recognise methane as the weak link in the argument that gas lowers emissions, and are participat­ing in a number of technology-sharing and target-driven programmes to address it. “We face it, because natural gas is part of fossil fuels, a sort of pushback from some groups,” said Patrick Pouyanne, CEO of Total SA. Fighting methane leaks “would be good for the whole industry to take that seriously if we want natural gas to find space for the future.”

Pouyanne criticised ConocoPhil­lips CEO Ryan Lance for not joining an industry coalition formed to fight methane leaks. “It’s important, we need to do it together,” he said. Lance responded by saying Conoco didn’t need to sign an agreement to fight something it had already been doing for a decade.

“I’m glad you’re reducing routine flaring Patrick because our company did a couple of years ago,” Lance said. “Hurry up and catch up.”

Emission levels

US emission levels are down to levels not seen since 1990 while those in the UK are at the lowest since the late 19th century due to gas replacing coal in power generation, according to BP’s Dudley.

The fuel should also be seen as a complement to renewable energy for when weather detracts from wind and solar power production, according to Shell’s De la Rey Venter, echoing a widelyheld view in the industry.

“If you really want to have a lot of renewables in your energy mix, you need to have a substantiv­e gas backbone in the energy mix to enable that,” he said. “This notion of gas as the ultimate enabler of deep renewable penetratio­n in an energy mix is very powerful.”

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth warned that a focus purely on renewables risks ignoring the needs of the developing world, where 1 billion people have no access to electricit­y. “Each of these people deserves access to reliable and affordable energy,” he said. Energy demand will rise 30 per cent to 2040, boosted by rising population­s, he said.

It’s a view shared by B.C. Tripathi, chairman of GAIL India Ltd, the biggest gas utility in India, where demand for energy is growing at almost 5 per cent a year.

“In the recent past we have seen people were sort of shying off the fossil fuel,” he said.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Darren Woods, chairman and chief executive officer of Exxon Mobil Corp (right), at the World Gas Conference in Washington on Tuesday. The conference is themed Fueling the Future.
Bloomberg Darren Woods, chairman and chief executive officer of Exxon Mobil Corp (right), at the World Gas Conference in Washington on Tuesday. The conference is themed Fueling the Future.

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