Investors Managing $10 Trillion Set Tough Climate Blueprint for Big Oil

Ron Bousso and Simon Jessop
Friday, September 17, 2021

 Investors managing more than $10 trillion on Wednesday published an ambitious blueprint for energy companies seeking to tackle climate change, including sharp cuts to greenhouse gas emissions and a winding down of oil and gas production.

The unprecedented initiative - dubbed the Net Zero Standard for Oil and Gas - details 10 required standards to help money managers compare companies' strategies and understand whether they are aligned with United Nations-backed efforts to reduce global carbon emissions to net-zero by 2050.

Oil and gas companies such as BP and Royal Dutch Shell have published targets and strategies aimed at battling climate change, but the huge variation in scope, definitions and ambition makes analysis and comparison exceedingly difficult for investors.

At the same time, pressure has grown on portfolio managers and banks to ensure that their investments chime with the 2015 Paris accords to limit global warming to no more than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

With the next round of global climate talks taking place in November, concern is growing that too many plans are flaky and unlikely to provide material help by reducing absolute emissions at the rate needed to limit global warming.

"We need to have a level playing field now on disclosure because it's not possible to compare and contrast across the sector," said Adam Matthews, who is head of responsible investment at the Church of England Pensions Board and chaired the investor-company process to develop the new initiative.

Other investors to back the plan include Amundi, Europe's biggest asset manager, along with Britain's Legal & General Investment Management, HSBC Global Asset Management and France-based Caisse des Depots among others.

Given the fossil fuel industry is responsible for the lion's share of global emissions, the investor group said it is introducing a minimum set of standards to ensure that energy companies' plans are "credible".

NET-ZERO TARGETS

Among these is a requirement to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, meeting emissions-reduction targets along the way while aligning capital expenditure and production plans with the net-zero target.

The standards also demand commitments to disclose and independently verify strategies.

Shell, Italian company Eni, and Norway's Equinor have all set targets to become net-zero emissions by 2050, meaning that any emissions they produce will be offset by carbon capture technologies or other solutions, such as reforestation.

Other companies, including BP and TotalEnergies, aim to reduce emissions from part of their operations to net-zero by 2025.

The investor group behind the new plan acknowledges that winding down oil and gas production "can be a very legitimate strategy", Matthews said.

Although it has not set a deadline for companies to adhere to the standards, investors are willing to vote against transition plans and the appointment of certain directors if they feel company boards are not doing enough, Matthews said.

The new standard will be piloted by leading energy companies including BP, Shell, Eni, Repsol, and TotalEnergies ahead of wider adoption by the sector, the investor group said.

Shell said in a statement that it was pleased to take part in the pilot and that "establishing a standard approach that allows investors to fairly assess companies' progress would be a valuable development."

This group said its plan had been developed by the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change with support from the Transition Pathway Initiative and in consultation with Climate Action 100+, non-governmental organizations with specific expertise in the sector as well as oil and gas companies themselves.

(Reporting by Ron Bousso and Simon Jessop; editing by David Goodman)

Categories: Energy Industry News Activity Decarbonization

Related Stories

TMC Books Compressors Orders for FPSO and LNG Vessels

EnQuest Bags Two Production Sharing Contracts off Indonesia

MODEC Wins ExxonMobil Guyana’s Hammerhead FPSO Contract

Indonesia Awards Oil and Gas Blocks to Boost Reserves

MODEC Gets Shell’s Gato do Mato FPSO Ops and Maintenance Job

Second Hai Long Substation Heads to Project Site Offshore Taiwan

Marine Masters Secures Wellhead Platforms Installation Job Off India

Europe's Gas Uncertainty Help Drive Asian LNG Spot Prices Higher

Saipem’s Castorone Vessel on Its Way to Türkiye’s Largest Gas Field

Shell Shuts Down Oil Processing Unit in Singapore Due to Suspected Leak

Current News

Shell-Reliance-ONGC JV Complete India’s First Offshore Decom Project

The Future of Long-Idle Drillships: Cold-Stacked or Dead-Stacked?

TMC Books Compressors Orders for FPSO and LNG Vessels

MODEC, Sumitomo Partner Up for Delivery of Gato do Mato FPSO

Chuditch Gas Field Up for Summer Drilling Ops as Sunda Reshapes Ownership Structure

EnQuest Bags Two Production Sharing Contracts off Indonesia

Hanwha Drilling’s Tidal Action Drillship En Route to Petrobras’ Roncador Field

China's ENN, Zhenhua Oil Ink LNG Supply Deals with ADNOC

MODEC Wins ExxonMobil Guyana’s Hammerhead FPSO Contract

India Stretches Bids Deadline for 13 Offshore Deep-Sea Mineral Blocks

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com