December 2020, Vol. 247, No. 12

Features

Oil Companies Ponder Ability to Mount Renewables Push

By Tsvetana Paraskova, Energy Writer  

It was not that long ago that large oil companies began announcing plans to overhaul long-term strategies to soothe investor concerns about climate change and become part of the solution in the energy transition – and then came the big oil price crash of 2020.  

An oil pump powered by solar panels.
An oil pump powered by solar panels.

The crash upended the short-term plans of major oil and gas firms, which had factored in oil prices between $50 and $60 a barrel when coming up with their investment strategies.    

With oil prices now in shambles, the industry is faced with a dilemma in regard to energy transition plans: Can companies afford to pay for a commitment to significantly boost investment in renewables when their profits are set to tumble now that oil has fallen to $40?    

When oil majors started announcing plans to increase renewables, analysts and international organizations said that if anyone in the energy industry had the firepower to scale up clean energy technologies, help drive green technology costs down and afford capital-intensive investments, it was Big Oil.   

Big Oil, for example, is a prime candidate to scale up and drive costs down in the offshore wind sector, where its expertise in offshore oil and gas exploration and production would be of great help. Global investments in offshore wind are expected to total $211 billion between 2020 and 2025, and the offshore wind market will become more attractive to oil and gas companies, Wood Mackenzie said in a recent report.   

Although returns from renewables are still playing catch-up with returns from oil and gas, Wood Mackenzie expects the energy transition theme to make offshore wind an attractive low-risk investment for companies with carbon-intensive portfolios.   

But, in light of the black swan coronavirus event, which triggered a massive collapse in oil demand as well as the collapse of the OPEC+ coalition, some oil company investments in renewables may be postponed as oil supermajors will have to radically rebalance and rethink their balance sheets over the next few months.   

Oil majors are unlikely to rethink their longer-term strategies, but they may have to respond to the oil price crash with near-term plans to cut capital expenditure over the next 12 to 24 months.   

Norway’s Equinor said it would grow its renewable energy capacity tenfold by 2026, becoming a global offshore wind major.   

Italy’s Eni plans to have global renewables installed capacity of 3 GW by 2023 and 5 GW by 2025, and to raise that capacity to more than 55 GW by 2050.  

France’s Total says it is building a portfolio of low-carbon businesses that could account for 15% to 20% of its sales by 2040. Total says it is well on track to reach its target to have 25 GW of installed power generation capacity from renewable sources by 2025.    

BP said in February that it aims to become a net-zero company by 2050 or sooner and increase the proportion of investment into non-oil and gas businesses over time.   

A month later and $20 less per barrel, BP’s Chief Financial Officer Brian Gilvary told CNBC that the company is now looking to adjust its balance sheet to the new reality to spare it from the volatility in oil prices.   

“In our targets for 2021, we had the company balanced at around $40 per barrel Brent, which was the key five-year target we put in place four years ago. We are on track for that,” he said.   

“In terms of where we are now, capital last year was running around $15 billion. We have the flexibility to take that capital down by up to 20% this year if we need to,” Gilvary added, noting that in terms of capital flexibility, BP is now in a much stronger position than the last time oil prices crashed this low.    

The oil price collapse could spark a new wave of restructuring in the oil and gas industry, but some majors may not look for oil and gas acquisitions because of the pledges to lower carbon intensity they have just announced, Wood Mackenzie’s Ann-Louise Hittle, Fraser McKay, Tom Ellacott and Rob Clarke said.   

“For some companies, this might be the catalyst for strategic repositioning. Unfortunately, a return to higher prices or another radical change in the cost base will be needed to provide sufficient capital to take that leap,” WoodMac’s analysts said.   

“The coronavirus crisis is adding to the uncertainties the global oil industry faces as it contemplates new investments and business strategies,” Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), said, commenting on the agency’s Oil 2020 report, whose release coincided with the day on which oil prices tumbled 25%.   

“The pressures on companies are changing. They need to show that they can deliver not just the energy that economies rely on, but also the emissions reductions that the world needs to help tackle our climate challenge,” Birol said.   

Extreme oil price volatility may defer oil companies’ investments in renewables, but it is also a stark reminder for oil majors to rethink, yet again, capital allocation strategies in the boom-and-bust oil cycles.   

 

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