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Big Oil gets its place at the climate table

  • : Crude oil, Emissions, Natural gas
  • 23/08/21

Two years after objecting to being frozen out of the Cop 26 UN climate conference in Glasgow, the oil and gas industry is expecting a very different reception at this year's meeting, with host country the UAE stressing the importance of fossil fuel producers having a seat at the table. But with that seat will come increased scrutiny on the industry and how it uses the platform to stake its claim to become part of the solution in the fight against climate change.

Much has been made of the decision to select the UAE as host of Cop 28. The country is already a major oil and gas producer and is several years into a programme to expand its production. Non-governmental organisations initially warned that giving the top Cop 28 job to Sultan al-Jaber, the long-time chief executive of Abu Dhabi's state oil company Adnoc, would "hurt the UAE's credibility in the role" and "set a dangerous precedent".

The backlash was hardly unexpected. Oil and gas operations account for nearly 15pc of energy-related greenhouse gas emissions, the IEA says, while consumption of oil and gas accounts for another 40pc. Conventional wisdom says oil and gas have long been part of the problem and need to be phased out, not encouraged. It was that sentiment that informed the decision to exclude some of the industry's biggest names from taking an active role in the Glasgow Cop. Many oil companies did not attend, and those that went tried to keep a low profile.

The snub did not sit well with the industry. Opec's then secretary-general, the late Mohammed Barkindo, lamented that the sector was "ostracised" from the summit. Oil and gas producers need to be included in planning for the transition to cleaner forms of energy, Barkindo said.

Doing things differently

At last year's Cop conference, hosted by Egypt, the industry was more visible. Saudi Arabia hosted its Middle East Green Initiative (MGI) summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, just outside the UN zone, featuring TotalEnergies chief executive Patrick Pouyanne and Saudi state-controlled Aramco chief executive Amin Nasser.

But this year in Dubai, al-Jaber, who is also the chairman of the country's state-owned renewables firm Masdar, wants the oil and gas industry to have a presence in order to leverage its expertise. Cop 28 chief executive Adnan Amin says they want to bring the oil and gas sector "to the table and bring them to the framework of accountability in front of the international community", adding that he understands the "legitimate concerns" this might bring.

"We need to be at that table," one senior executive from a Mideast Gulf hydrocarbons producer says. "Oil and gas make up close to 55pc of our primary energy mix today. How can you ignore that? We can do a lot, we just need to be part of the discussion." What the industry hopes to see at Cop 28 is a shift in the general narrative around the energy transition and the actions that need to be taken, but also in the sentiment towards the industry and the role it can and should be playing in the transition towards cleaner energy. "We owe it to ourselves and our industry to show up," BP chief executive Bernard Looney says.

But what a more formal participation of the oil and gas sector will look like at Cop 28 remains unclear. The UNFCCC — the UN's climate arm — is a party-driven process, civil society organisation Oil Change International campaign manager David Tong says. "The presidency has formal and informal ways in shaping discussions, but there is no framework for a direct dialogue in formal sessions between one industry and governments," Tong says.

Oil and gas companies and organisations have so far not rushed to confirm their participation. Shell talks about having a low-key presence, to "listen to discussions and engage with key stakeholders", but others have declined to comment on the record.

"Mideast Gulf producers like the UAE, like Saudi Arabia… they want co-operation on these climate issues, not to be painted as the enemy by environmentalists," consultancy Energy Outlook Advisors managing partner Anas Alhajji says. "They accept that energy consumption is growing and that we need renewables like solar or wind… But what they say is to use those energies for the right applications, where it makes sense, alongside traditional oil and gas."

The opportunity for the industry to work in concert with governments on these issues will open more avenues to share expertise and technologies that few outside the hydrocarbons sector may be familiar with. This could include, for example, ways of integrating the use of renewables into the hydrocarbon framework. "Using wind or solar to power operations at remote oil and gas fields would work, instead of having to ship diesel long distances," Alhajji says. "Sharing information like this becomes extremely important."

The climate debate has become "too ideological", industry executives say, which has complicated their efforts to engage in a meaningful way. They hope this summit can begin to change that. A big part of this will rest with them and what they bring to the table. But for many observers, it is unlikely to be enough.

The industry's biggest players have long acknowledged that more needs to be done to deliver what the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says is needed to limit global temperature rises to no more than 1.5°C compared with pre-industrial averages by the end of the century. Projected CO2 emissions from "existing fossil fuel infrastructure without additional abatement would exceed the remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C", the IPCC says. Many in the industry say they are open to doing more to curb their emissions, but want clear and long-term policy guidance from governments, with a "clear roadmap for investment".

Scope 3 elephant

Al-Jaber urges the entire industry to achieve net zero by or before 2050. Cop 28's Amin previously said they are also working on a 2030 target — although this could prove more difficult — and towards net zero methane emissions by 2030. This could translate into a pledge made on the sidelines of Cop 28, or even before the summit. TotalEnergies' Pouyanne said at the Opec Seminar in Vienna last month that international and national oil companies should commit to signing up to 2030 reduction targets for Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions — those from the production, transport and processing of oil and gas.

Adnoc last month announced that it had brought forward its target to reach net zero emissions from its operations by five years to 2045. This has put "an expectation on other oil producers to follow suit", Alhajji says, to demonstrate the industry's commitment and seriousness.

But one topic notable by its absence from the industry's discussions ahead of Cop 28 is what to do about Scope 3 emissions — those from the use of oil and gas. The issue comes back to the question of who has responsibility for the emissions — the producer or the consumer? And while some companies are taking steps to counter a portion of their Scope 3 emissions, others continue to argue that customers have their part to play. Al-Jaber's ambition for industry-wide net zero by 2050 appears to only cover Scope 1 and 2 emissions.

A deal that excludes the industry's Scope 3 emissions would "lack credibility", Tong says. If Adnoc can step up and bring to the table other national oil companies, and they can show that they are starting to grapple with the need to transition from oil and gas, this could be "powerful" — but this is unlikely, according to Tong.

Majors' stated emissions goals
CompanyScope 1 and 2Scope 3Net zero by 2050?
BP*20% reduction by 2025, 50% by 203010-15% reduction by 2025, 20-30% by 2030Y
Chevron†5% reduction by 2028, net zero by 2050 5% reduction by 2028N
ExxonMobil‡30% reduction within upstream operation by 2030, 20% across entire company by 2030, net zero by 2050-N
Shell‡50% reduction by 20309-13% reduction by 2025Y
TotalEnergies#40% reduction by 203030% reduction by 2025, 40% by 2030Y
*2019 baseline. Scope 3 targets lowered in early 2023 from 20% by 2025 and 35-40pc by 2030
†2016 baseline. Chevron uses a portfolio carbon intensity target that includes Scope 1, 2 and 3
‡2016 baseline
#2015 baseline

Oil companies' Scope 1 and 2 targets

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25/04/02

Australia’s gas leaders hit out at market intervention

Australia’s gas leaders hit out at market intervention

Sydney, 2 April (Argus) — Senior figures in Australia's upstream gas sector have hit out at plans for intervention in the heavily regulated industry, as debate continues on how to best address domestic supply shortfalls later this decade. The federal Coalition in March announced National Gas Plan including a 50-100 PJ/yr (1.34bn-2.68bn m³/yr) domestic reservation system aimed at forcing the three LNG exporters based in Queensland's Gladstone to direct more supply to the eastern states' market. But oversupplying the market to drive down prices would destroy the viability of smaller gas projects, Australian independent Beach Energy's chief executive Brett Woods said at a conference in Sydney on 1 April. The domestic-focused firm, which will export some LNG volumes via its Waitsia project in 2025, warns that such a move by the Peter Dutton-led opposition would reduce export incomes while harming Australia's international reputation. The volumes impacted by the policy could reach around 900,000-1.8mn t/yr. Expropriation of developed reserves is equivalent to breaking contracts with LNG buyers and with the foreign and local investors that the country needs for ongoing economic security, Woods said on 1 April. Domestic gas reservation systems put in place by the state governments of Western Australia (WA) and Queensland, designed to keep local markets well supplied, were "clearly supportable", Woods said, but only future supply should be subject to the regulations. LNG terminals, which represent about 70pc of eastern Australia's total gas consumption and shipped 24mn t in 2024 , should not be blamed for the failure of governments to expedite new supply and plan for Australia's gas future, head of Shell Australia Cecile Wake said in response to the Coalition's proposal. Shell's QGC business supplied 15pc of its volumes to the local grid, with the remainder shipped from its 8.5mn t/yr Queensland Curtis LNG project, Wake added. Canberra has moved to promote gas use as a transition fuel to firm renewable energy in line with its 2030 emissions reduction targets, but progress has been slow as reforming laws appear to be hampering development . The state governments, particularly in gas-poor Victoria and New South Wales (NSW), must recognise the need for locally-produced supply and streamline the approvals processes, especially environmental permits, executives said. But despite pleas for an end to years of interventionist policy — including the governing Labor party's measures to cap the price of domestic gas at A$12/GJ , Australia's fractured political environment and rising cost of living has sparked largely populist responses from its leaders. A so-called "hung" parliament is likely to result from the 3 May poll , with a variety of mainly left-leaning independents representing an anti-fossil fuel agenda expected to control the balance of power in Australia's parliament. LNG debate sharpens Debate on the causes of southern Australia's gas deficit has persisted, and the ironic outcome of underinvestment in gas supply could be LNG re-imports from Gladstone to NSW, Victoria and South Australia, making fracked coal-bed methane — liquefied in Queensland and regasified — a likely higher-emissions alternative to pipeline supply. Several developers are readying for this possibility , which is considered inevitable without action to increase supply in Victoria or NSW, increase winter storages or raise north-south pipeline capacity. Australian pipeline operator APA appears to have the most to lose out of the active firms in the gas sector. APA chief executive Adam Watson this week criticised plans for imports, because relying on LNG will set the price of domestic gas at a detrimental level, raise emissions and decrease reliability of supply, Watson said. The firm is planning to increase its eastern pipeline capacity by 25pc to bring new supplies from the Bass, Surat and Beetaloo basins to market. But investment certainty is needed or Australia will risk needing to subsidise coal-fired power for longer if sufficient gas is unavailable to back up wind and solar generators with peaking power, Watson said. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil’s Bauna oilfield restarts after maintenance


25/04/02
25/04/02

Brazil’s Bauna oilfield restarts after maintenance

Sydney, 2 April (Argus) — Brazil-focused Australian oil and gas company Karoon Energy has brought its Bauna oilfield in the offshore Santos basin back on line after the completion of intervention works at its SPS-88 well in February. Production resumed on 27 March after the project was shut down for maintenance on 7 March, Karoon said. The field's output has since reached about 26,500 b/d, above pre-shutdown levels because of the return of SPS-88 well production on 28 March. The well is pumping 2,000 b/d of oil on a restricted choke and is gradually being opened further, with rates in line with expectations. The intervention was originally planned for October-December 2024 after being taken off line in November 2023 because of a mechanical blockage in the gas lift valve. Karoon's plans to acquire the Cidade de Itajai floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) unit at its Bauna oilfield have progressed, with the transaction on track to close as forecast in April. Selection of a new operations and maintenance contractor for the FPSO will be announced in mid-2025, with an updated cost guidance to be provided once terms are agreed. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Canada oil producers get 6pc 1Q lift on weaker currency


25/04/01
25/04/01

Canada oil producers get 6pc 1Q lift on weaker currency

Calgary, 1 April (Argus) — A depreciating Canadian dollar is giving oil sands producers an extra lift and complementing relatively strong domestic crude prices to help weather tariff concerns. The Canadian dollar, on average, was worth C$1.44 to one US dollar in January-March 2025, weakening from C$1.35 to the greenback in the same quarter 2024, according to the Bank of Canada. That represents a more than 6pc advantage to Canadian producers selling crude in US dollars who then turn those earnings around to pay workers and suppliers in local currency. The outright price for heavy sour Western Canadian Select (WCS) at Hardisty, Alberta, settled at $58.67/bl in the first quarter this year, according to Argus data. This is only $1/bl higher than the same period last year, but with the now weaker Canadian dollar, that converts to over C$84/bl for producers who would have seen that under C$78/bl in the first quarter 2024. The Canadian dollar, on average, was worth C$1.37 to the US dollar in 2024, weakening from C$1.35 to the greenback in 2023 and the weakest annual average since 2003. The Bank of Canada largely attributes the sliding Canadian dollar to a rising foreign exchange rate risk premium, which relates to holding currencies other than the US dollar. This premium rises with uncertainty that has been amplified by US president Donald Trump's tariff actions in recent months, and that has also weighed on currencies from other economies, hitting developing countries' currencies harder than those of advanced economies. Also keeping the US dollar elevated is the US Federal Reserve's recent caution about resuming its cycle of cutting interest rates, thus attracting relatively more investors to US Treasury bills and boosting demand for US dollars. Canada meanwhile has brought its target rate lower to try to get ahead of an anticipated economic slowdown. The Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on [19 March](https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2669490) held the federal funds rate unchanged at 4.25-4.50pc for a second consecutive meeting after cutting at the last three meetings of 2024. The Bank of Canada a week earlier lowered its overnight rate for the seventh consecutive time to 2.75pc. Giving a more obvious boost to Canadian producers in the first quarter this year compared with a year earlier have been the appreciating domestic crude prices relative to the US light sweet benchmark, which has weakened across the same period. WCS trades at a discount to the Nymex WTI calendar month average (CMA) and that gap has narrowed on the back of new export pipeline capacity out of Canada, added in May 2024. WCS traded at about $12.75/bl under the WTI CMA across the first quarter this year, compared with a $19.25/bl discount a year earlier. More recent trade activity shows WCS for April-delivery narrowing further yet to within $10/bl under the basis — the tightest since April 2021 — with oil sands producers temporarily shutting in some production to embark on major maintenance . By Brett Holmes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US oil, farm groups push EPA for steep biofuel mandate


25/04/01
25/04/01

US oil, farm groups push EPA for steep biofuel mandate

New York, 1 April (Argus) — The American Petroleum Institute and biofuel-supporting groups told Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) officials at a meeting today that the agency should sharply raise advanced biofuel blend mandates for 2026. The coalition told EPA that it supported a biomass-based diesel mandate next year of 5.25bn USG, up from 3.35bn USG this year, and a broader advanced biofuel mandate, including the cellulosic category, at 10bn Renewable Identification Number (RIN) credits, up from 7.33bn RINs this year, according to three different groups that attended the meeting. Both mandates would be record highs for the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) program. Soybean oil futures and RIN credit prices have risen sharply over the past week on optimism that oil and biofuel interests were working to coordinate volume mandate requests for consideration by President Donald Trump's administration. The coalition is also pushing the agency to set a total conventional volume requirement at 25bn RINs, which would keep an implied mandate for corn ethanol flat at 15bn USG. Ethanol groups had previously eyed a mandate even higher, but limits on the amount of ethanol that can be blended into gasoline make much more-stringent requirements a tough sell to oil refiners. The coalition provided no specific request for the cellulosic biofuel subcategory, where most credit generation comes from biogas. Credits in that category are more expensive, but price concerns have been less potent recently given an EPA proposal to lower previously set cellulosic obligations, signaling that future volume requirements can be cut, too. EPA is aiming to finalize new RFS volume mandates by the end of the year if not earlier, people familiar with the administration's thinking have said. EPA officials signaled at the meeting they were working urgently on the rulemaking. "The agency is intent on getting the RFS program back on the statutory timeline for issuing renewable volume obligation rules," EPA said, declining to comment further on its plans for the rule. The RFS program requires oil refiners and importers to blend biofuels into the conventional fuel supply or buy credits from those who do. Under the program's unique nesting structure, credits from blending lower-carbon biofuels can be used to meet obligations for other program categories. One gallon of corn ethanol generates 1 RIN, but more energy-dense fuels earn more RIN credits per gallon. Some disagreements persist While groups at the meeting were aligned around high-level mandates, how administration officials and courts treat small refinery requests for exemptions from RFS requirements could undercut those targets. Groups present were broadly aligned on asking EPA not to grant widespread exemptions, though there is still disagreement in the industry about how best to account for exempted volumes when deciding requirements for other refiners. Groups present at the meeting today included the American Petroleum Institute and representatives of biofuel producers and crop feedstock suppliers. Some groups that previously engaged with the coalition's efforts to project unity to the Trump administration were not present. And some groups more historically skeptical of the RFS and more supportive of small refinery exemptions — including the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers — have not been closely involved. Fuel marketer groups notably did not attend the meeting after a representative sparred with others in the coalition at an American Petroleum Institute meeting last month. Some retail groups, including the National Association of Convenience Stores and the National Association of Truck Stop Operators, instead sent a letter to EPA today arguing that the groups pushing steep volumes are discounting potential headwinds to the sector from new tax credit policy. Some of the groups advocating for higher biofuel volumes have pointed to high production capacity and feedstock availability, but have preferred to ignore thornier issues like tax credits, lobbyists say. "An overly aggressive increase in advanced biofuel blending mandates under the RFS will be punitive for American consumers" without extending a long-running $1/USG tax credit for biomass-based diesel blenders, the retailers' letter said. That incentive expired last year and was replaced by the Inflation Reduction Act's "45Z" credit, which offers subsidies to producers instead of blenders and throttles benefits based on carbon intensity. Generally lower credit values for biomass-based diesel — coupled with the US government's delays setting final regulations on qualifying for the credit — have spurred a sharp drop in biofuel production to start the year. Without a blenders credit, the RFS volume mandates pushed by some groups could increase retail diesel prices by 30¢/USG, the fuel marketers estimate, a potential political headache for a president that ran on curbing consumer costs. Other biofuel groups say that extending the credit would be an uphill battle this year, with some lawmakers and lobbyists instead focused on legislatively tweaking the 45Z incentive's rules to benefit crop feedstocks instead of reverting wholesale to the prior tax policy. By Cole Martin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Next US tariffs to take effect 'immediately'


25/04/01
25/04/01

Next US tariffs to take effect 'immediately'

Washington, 1 April (Argus) — President Donald Trump plans to announce a sweeping batch of tariffs on Wednesday afternoon that will take effect "immediately", the White House said today. Trump will unveil his much anticipated tariff decision Wednesday at 4pm ET during a ceremony at the White House Rose Garden. While the administration has announced the effective date, there is little clarity on what goods will face tariffs at what rates and against which countries, leaving the government agencies that will be tasked with enforcing new tariffs largely in the dark. "The president has a brilliant team of advisers who have been studying these issues for decades, and we are focused on restoring the golden age of America and making America a manufacturing superpower," the White House said today, brushing off criticism from economists, industry groups and investors. Economic activity in the US manufacturing sector contracted in March as businesses braced for Trump's tariff threats. Trump has previewed or announced multiple tariff actions since taking office. The barriers in place now include a 20pc tariff on all imports from China, in effect since 4 March, and a 25pc tax on all imported steel and aluminum, in effect since 12 March. A 25pc tariff on all imported cars, trucks and auto parts, is scheduled to go into effect on 3 April, the White House confirmed today. Trump and his advisers have previewed two possible courses of action for 2 April. Trump has suggested that all major US trading partners are likely to see a broad increase in tariffs in an effort to reduce the US trade deficit and to raise more revenue for the US federal budget. But Trump separately has talked about the need for "reciprocal tariffs", contending that most foreign countries typically charge higher rates of tariffs on US exports than the US applies to imports from those countries. In that scenario, high tariffs become a negotiating tool to bring down alleged foreign barriers to US exports. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News on Monday night that the second course is the one Trump is more likely to take. Trump will announce "reciprocal tariffs" and "everyone will have the opportunity to lower their tariffs, lower their non-tariff barriers, stop the currency manipulation" and "make the global trading system fair for American workers again", Bessent said. But the White House insisted today that the new tariffs will not be a negotiating tool. Trump is "always up for a good negotiation, but he is very much focused on fixing the wrongs of the past and showing that American workers have a fair shake", the White House said. Trump's words and actions already have drawn retaliatory tariffs from Canada and China, and the EU is preparing to implement its first batch of counter-tariffs in April. Trump, for now, has deferred his tariff plans for imported Canadian and Mexican oil and other energy commodities. But the US oil and gas sector, which depends on pipelines and foreign-flagged vessels to transport its crude, natural gas, refined products and LNG, will feel the effects of tariffs on imported steel and proposed fees on Chinese-made and owned vessels calling at US ports. By Haik Gugarats Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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