Weekend Herald

Energy firms face downgrade danger, warns ratings agency

- Gautam Naik Bloomberg

Much of the fossil fuel industry may be facing an era of credit downgrades if producers prove too slow to adapt to a low-carbon future, according to Fitch Ratings.

Oil and gas companies stand out as the most vulnerable issuers in an analysis by Fitch, which sought to gauge how businesses will cope with climate risks such as increasing­ly stringent emissions regulation­s.

Fitch’s models show that more than a fifth of global corporates face a material risk of a ratings downgrade due to an “elevated” level of climate vulnerabil­ity over the coming decade. Half of those issuers are in the oil and gas industry, while coal and utilities also stand out as being particular­ly exposed to the risk of downgrades, the analysis shows.

What’s more, over half the global issuers potentiall­y facing downgrades due to climate risk are currently investment grade, according to Fitch, which based its report on a sample of 715 companies.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency estimates that global demand for oil will peak this decade. But other researcher­s warn that the tide may turn even sooner. According to Inevitable Policy Response, a forecastin­g group whose data was used in the Fitch analysis, peak oil may come in 2025, after which demand will sink more than 60 per cent over the next two-and-a-half decades.

The scale of the demand slump ahead “is a very big number”, said Sophie Coutaux, head of ESG for corporate ratings at Fitch. There’s now a “big question mark” whether producers will “be able to adapt”, she said.

The warning comes as much of the oil industry doubles down on its core business, after the war in Ukraine spurred an energy crisis that fanned fossil fuel prices. Oil majors have used cash flows inflated by higher prices to enrich shareholde­rs with buybacks, and expand through acquisitio­ns.

But outsize fossil-fuel profits are showing signs of waning. This week, BP’s share price fell after posting results that fell short of analyst estimates, due to weak gas earnings.

BP’s interim chief executive officer, Murray Auchinclos­s, said on Tuesday that the company expects to “grow earnings through this decade”. He also said more of that growth now needs to come from clean energy, and “not the oil and gas side”.

Fitch pointed to Shell as an example of an integrated oil and gas company with “average” industry exposure to transition risk. Shell has formulated a low-carbon strategy, but because most of its operating profit (measured as Ebitda) will still come from fossil fuels by the end of the decade, it “remains exposed to possible increases in funding costs”, according to Fitch. Its “low levels of financial leverage” may mitigate that risk, Fitch also said.

A spokespers­on for Shell declined to comment.

Some of the world’s biggest oil and gas companies are hoping they’ll be able to achieve future emissions reductions by using carbon-capture technology that is yet to be fully developed. However, Fitch warns that time may be running out for some in the industry to produce feasible emissions reductions plans.

Some investment-grade issuers “have started to invest in low carbon,” but “the pace needs to be accelerate­d”, Coutax said.

The credit ratings industry has so far struggled to figure out how best to incorporat­e climate risk in its models, largely leaving fixed-income investors to navigate their own way through the new landscape. But according to the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, there’s an ongoing debate inside the biggest ratings firms.

“Alarm bells have been sounding for months”, Hazel Ilango, an energy finance analyst focused on debt markets at IEEFA, said in a recent interview.

Meanwhile, internatio­nal alliances are forming to demand drastic cuts in fossil fuel production, with the issue set to become a central debate at this month’s COP28 climate summit in Dubai.

The High Ambition Coalition — which counts the Marshall Islands, Austria and France among its members — is the latest to make such calls in the name of fighting climate change.

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