Houston Chronicle Sunday

REFINING NEW PATH

State-owned oil firms taking steps toward greener futures.

- By Amy Stillman BLOOMBERG

Petroleos Mexicanos left investors with more questions than answers after it announced in late July that it would be disclosing its greenhouse gas emissions on a more regular basis — then refused to discuss why they’d soared by double-digits from April to

June, compared to a year ago.

The moment was awkward to say the least, but analysts also welcomed it as a first wobbly step in a segment of the fossil fuel industry that’s still refining its green marketing strategy.

Pemex, as the Mexican oil giant is known, is among a growing number of national oil companies facing pressure from foreign shareholde­rs and investors to track carbon emissions and reduce them. Unlike their privately held peers, these oil companies’ main shareholde­r is the state, putting some riskier or more experiment­al options out of reach.

State oil companies “have less flexibilit­y to make investment­s or strategic changes in their business,” said Jonathan Wood, deputy global research director for Control Risks, a global risk consultanc­y group. They can’t simply sell their high-emitting assets, for instance. “Their mandate is to maximize government revenues and ensure a stable supply of affordable, domestic energy. And they are often working in markets where there are price controls or other measures designed to achieve those outcomes, which is very different than what internatio­nal oil companies face,” said Wood.

The challenges among state drillers aren’t uniform, either, and some are far more advanced than others in meeting sustainabi­lity goals. While each oil company has its own unique set of drivers, the vast majority of them will behave according to their government’s economic and political strategy.

European state energy companies, such as Equinor in Norway, are among the top oil firms for sustainabi­lity due to Europe’s wealth and ambitious climate commitment­s. Saudi Arabia’s state oil company, Saudi Aramco, meanwhile, has also picked up the pace since its initial public offering two years ago. Not only is it facing pressure from outside investors, it’s also getting a push from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, whose Vision 2030 reform plan aims to diversify the economy in preparatio­n for a post-oil future.

Even so, Aramco is several steps behind the internatio­nal oil majors. It understate­d its emissions by as much as 50 percent at the start of the year, a Bloomberg Green investigat­ion revealed. Although it later said it would improve its reporting, in March it acknowledg­ed that two wholly owned assets were not included in its emissions tally for its 2020 annual report. And Aramco has stuck to revealing emissions only from assets it controls, excluding multiple joint ventures

In poorer regions, meanwhile, government-controlled oil producers face greater pressure to balance sustainabi­lity targets with their countries’ economic needs. On rare occasions — such as Colombia’s recent decision to sell an electricit­y transmissi­on company to its state-controlled driller, Ecopetrol, which is aiming for net-zero emissions by 2050 — the two may coincide.

More often, developing countries’ economic and sustainabi­lity targets aren’t so synergetic. In Mexico, for instance, leftist leader Andrés Manuel López Obrador swept into power in late 2018 promising to recuperate the economy by increasing oil and fuel production at Pemex. But because Pemex’s refineries lack the technology to extract cleaner fuels from the sludge left over during the initial process of turning crude into gasoline, they’ve also wound up increasing their output of highly polluting fuel oil. The more gasoline the country’s refineries produce, the more extra fuel oil they need to find a home for.

With the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on now mandating the use of less-polluting fuel, Pemex has been selling its fuel oil cheaply to the state utility, Comisión Federal de Electricid­ad, to burn at its plants. CFE buys about 45,000 barrels of fuel oil a day from Pemex, Mexico’s Energy Minister Rocio Nahle said. Switching a power plant from natural gas to fuel oil generates 16 percent more carbon dioxide, according to BloombergN­EF calculatio­ns.

National oil companies are also absorbing a greater chunk of oil assets from internatio­nal majors that are divesting their fossil fuels business, exemplifie­d by Pemex’s planned takeover of the Deer Park refinery in Texas from Royal Dutch Shell, which it announced in May. If they’re forced to respond to environmen­tal regulation­s in foreign jurisdicti­ons, however, that could have a ripple effect on their domestic business, noted Wood.

“If you have to report on greenhouse gas emissions for a large U.S.-based refinery, that becomes an institutio­nal capability and knowledge that you may want to transfer elsewhere,” he said. “The next step for many of these companies is not just figuring out what their targets should be, but how they are going to quantify and measure against them, and actually deliver performanc­e improvemen­ts.”

The main way to improve state oil companies’ carbon footprints is for the internatio­nal community to incentiviz­e developing countries to reduce emissions, analysts said. This is all the more important when you consider that state producers contribute just over half of today’s worldwide oil supply, a figure that could reach 65 percent by 2050, according to Rystad Energy.

That incentive could take the form of funding, according to Mauricio Cárdenas, a senior fellow at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. Unless their government­s are fully committed to emissions targets, “the only reason these companies will actually take a strong stance is if financing becomes an issue,” he said.

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 ?? Amr Nabil / Associated Press ?? Saudi Aramco and other state-owned oil producers make up just over half of the world’s oil supply. That number could climb to 65 percent by 2050, according to Rystad Energy.
Amr Nabil / Associated Press Saudi Aramco and other state-owned oil producers make up just over half of the world’s oil supply. That number could climb to 65 percent by 2050, according to Rystad Energy.

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