Oil and gas companies invest in production that will tip world towards climate catastrophe
$58bn committed to projects that are not even compatible with 2.5°C
LONDON/NEW YORK, 8 December – Oil and gas companies are spending vast sums on new production that will tip the world towards climate catastrophe, reveals a report from the financial think tank Carbon Tracker released today.
It finds that in 2021 and the first quarter of 2022 Chevron, Eni, Shell, TotalEnergies and other companies approved a total $58bn of investment that will only be needed if oil and gas demand grows to the point where it pushes global temperatures beyond 2.5°C.
Most new oil and gas projects take years to come into production and could lock in high carbon emissions for decades. The International Energy Agency (IEA) says no new long lead oil or gas fields are compatible with 1.5°C and consumption must fall rapidly to meet the Paris climate target, but most companies are planning to increase production.
Thom Allen, Oil and Gas Analyst and report author, said: “Oil and gas companies are marketing themselves as part of the solution to climate change while simultaneously planning production increases that would lead to climate catastrophe. Companies cannot claim to be aligned with global climate targets unless they are planning to cut production.”
The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned this year that 1.5°C represents a critical level beyond which the impacts of climate change will accelerate strongly with some becoming irreversible.[1] UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres called its report “an atlas of human suffering” and has warned that “every fraction of a degree counts.”
Carbon Tracker’s report, Paris Maligned: How investors should assess climate alignment of oil & gas companies, analyses the production and spending plans of upstream oil and gas companies over the next decade and finds that from January 2021 to March 2022 they approved $166bn of investment in new oil and gas fields, almost all incompatible with 1.5°C.
More than a third of this investment - $58bn – was committed to projects that are only likely to be economic if demand for oil and gas pushes global temperatures beyond 2.5°C, for example:
- TotalEnergies is leading the $10bn Lake Albert oilfield development in Uganda that will supply the controversial East African Crude Oil Pipeline;
- Woodside is developing the $12bn Scarborough/Pluto Train 2 LNG project in Western Australia.
- Eni’s $5.4bn Bahr Es Salam deep water gas and condensate development offshore Libya;
- Woodside’s $4.5bn ultra-deep water Trion oilfield offshore Mexico;
- TotalEnergies’ and Equinor’s $4.3bn North Platte deep water oilfield offshore the US;
- ExxonMobil’s $3.5bn Uaru ultra-deep water oilfield offshore Guyana.