Shell Response press release
Shell underestimates risk for up to $77 bln of high cost oil projects
Responding to Shell: An Analytical Perspective
London, July 9th 2014 -- The Carbon Tracker Initiative (CTI) and Energy Transition Advisors (ETA) have today jointly published a thorough response to Shell’s stranded assets statement published on May 16th. The think tanks’ reply is based on a detailed technical analysis of Shell’s argument. Overall, we welcome the engagement with these issues, but Shell’s approach is based on dismissing potentially weaker demand for its oil due to tougher climate policies, technological advances and slower economic growth. CTI and ETA have also found that the company selectively applies different timelines to fit its business strategy. For example, Shell:
- Highlights conventional projects with short lead times and lower capital costs rather than its growing unconventional and deepwater portfolio which will be more capital intensive, have longer lead times and extended payback periods. Many of the latter will not pay out until well into the next decade.
- Only considers its proven oil and gas reserves that equate to 11.5 years of production at current rates - adding existing discoveries extends that period to 25 years, and possibly longer.
- Acknowledges the need for urgent action on climate change, but states that the world will fail to meet the internationally agreed global warming target of 2 degrees Celsius..
- Dismisses the likelihood of political action on climate change, ignoring the growing list of national and regional emissions measures being legislated and the growing calls and potential for greater energy efficiency worldwide.
- Prefers to focus on today’s energy realities, but relies on Carbon Capture & Storage as a panacea to combat climate change, which CTI’s 2013 research shows can only provide a limited extension (14%) of the carbon budget to 2050.
- “Stranded asset” risk, in terms of high cost, low return investments leading to shareholder value destruction, is a real and current issue for oil producers to address, due to (1) the potential for global oil demand to decline within the next 10-15 years (even without a global deal); and (2) the 15-20 year lead times required to bring many newly-discovered resources to market.
- Oil companies should examine and disclose demand/price/carbon risks to all potential future production, rather than restricting focus to proven reserves alone..
- Shell should provide more detail on the role its internal carbon price of $40 per tonne plays in hitting demand for its oil.
- Shell's $77 billion of potential capex (2014-25) on new high-cost (above a market price of $95 per barrel) oil production ought to be a focal point for engagement with investors.
- To help shareholders to assess risk, oil companies ought to disclose estimated breakeven oil prices (BEOPs) of all new projects
- Shareholders should use the CTI/ETA analysis to engage with management to ensure that capital is not allocated to high breakeven oil price (BEOP) projects that appear marginal in a BAU environment and value destroying in a low-carbon scenario.
- Rather than dismissing low-carbon outcomes as unlikely, Shell's long-term energy outlooks ought to more seriously consider the implications of a 2°C climate scenario.