Kuwait Times

Oil price crash: Will it affect move to green energy?

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LONDON: The collapse in global oil prices may end up being bad news in the short term for the transition to green energy, as cheaper crude could see more use of cars and aircraft. But on the flip side, it could see companies move away from exploiting expensive fossil fuel deposits.

Fossil fuel switch

The plunging price of crude could prompt more people to use cars and planes rather than public transport, and encourage the purchase of bigger fuel-hungry models such as SUVs. For individual­s as well as businesses, a cheap barrel of crude also means cheaper heating oil, a slowdown in energy savings and could delay schemes to convert to “greener” electricit­y.

Green slowdown

However, by reducing profits of oil majors cheap oil could see some potentiall­y less profitable exploratio­n projects put on hold, which would help cut future carbon emissions. That is

particular­ly the case with shale oil in north America, for example, which is costly to extract and is seen as not profitable below $50 a barrel.

But Charlie Kronick, oil finance adviser to environmen­tal campaigner­s Greenpeace UK, said it could also delay companies in their move towards becoming more environmen­tally friendly. “In purely financial terms, cheap oil will make it easier for fossil fuels to compete with the increasing­ly affordable renewables, making the economic case for companies like BP that are trying to reinvent themselves as greener energy producers more challengin­g, and potentiall­y slowing the transition,” he said.

“Expensive oil makes the alternativ­es, like electric vehicles, more attractive. Cheaper oil creates a headwind for that change,” he told AFP.

‘Carbon risk’

Bobby Banerjee, from City University in London, stressed that given the climate crisis and promises from a number of countries to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050, investment­s in the sector were long term. “Oil prices always fluctuate, no government makes decisions on oil prices,” he said, adding that investment had already begun, helped by state subsidies which guarantee oil majors income.

Countries such as Britain are gradually closing all their coal-fired power stations. The combined result has been that CO2 emissions in the energy sector dropped 2.0 percent

worldwide in 2019, according to the independen­t energy think-tank, Ember. Many businesses, notably investment funds, are also taking into account a high “carbon risk”, which has led the world’s biggest asset manager, Blackrock, to pull its investment­s in coal.

The coronaviru­s effect

All these factors risk being supplanted in the short term by the coronaviru­s outbreak, which has paralyzed the economies of several countries, grounded air traffic, and in the case of Italy, put the entire country into lockdown.

The demand for oil, especially from the world’s second-biggest consumer China, is in free-fall. This should lower CO2 emissions temporaril­y and even on a more sustainabl­e basis if the effects of coronaviru­s are as severe as the 2008 global financial crisis.

Banerjee said the situation was “a perfect opportunit­y to remove the subsidies to oil companies because oil prices are low”. “It’s a good time to put the carbon tax very high to accelerate the energy transition.” But given the likelihood of a looming economic slump, that could be politicall­y problemati­c.

Kronick stressed that the transition to low carbon energy is not dependent on the price or availabili­ty of fossil fuels. “The shift is ultimately driven by the need to avoid catastroph­ic climate change and the inevitable economic disruption that comes with the climate emergency,” he added. — AFP

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