埃克森美孚停止二叠纪天然气常规燃烧,希望其他公司效仿

埃克森美孚正在寻求对火炬燃烧实施更严格的监管,以“创造公平的竞争环境”。

萨布丽娜·瓦莱,路透社

埃克森美孚公司官员在接受采访时表示,该公司已停止在美国顶级页岩盆地生产的天然气进行常规燃烧,并将敦促竞争对手采取更严格的监管措施,要求他们也这样做。

美国最大的石油生产商正在与指控其和其他石油公司导致全球变暖和海平面上升的诉讼作斗争。与此同时,它已采取行动减少自身排放,并支持政府打击石油和天然气运营商以查找和修复天然气泄漏的努力。

埃克森美孚表示,其接受更严格的甲烷监管旨在使石油和天然气生产商处于平等地位。甲烷是天然气的主要成分,是一种强效温室气体。

“它创造了公平的竞争环境,”埃克森美孚首席环境科学家马特·科勒萨尔在接受采访时表示。“我们需要强有力的监管,因此无论谁拥有该设施”或他们在世界各地运营都无关紧要。

低垂的果实

咨询公司 Rystad Energy 表示,在生产过程中减少燃烧天然气是遏制温室气体排放和增加天然气产量的一种简单方法。

尽管如此,埃克森美孚仍然反对让石油公司对销售给消费者的产品使用过程中产生的排放负责。欧洲壳牌和英国石油公司等一些石油公司已将客户排放纳入其 2050 年净零排放目标中。

埃克森反驳说,关注甲烷是减缓气候变化的更好途径,甲烷是一种温室气体,其效力比二氧化碳高出 80 倍。

Kolesar 表示,“这是迄今为止业内最具成本效益的”脱碳策略。

下一步,埃克森美孚计划发射一颗卫星,在年底前开始追踪二叠纪盆地的温室气体排放——这是未来三年与气候监测公司 Scepter Inc. 合作在全球部署的 24 颗卫星中的第一颗。埃克森美孚盆地总经理戴维·斯科特说。

二叠纪盆地生产的一些变化很小,例如添加小型压缩机将天然气推入管道。斯科特说,这些成本完全被所售天然气的价值所抵消。

埃克森美孚将在 2027 年之前拨款 170 亿美元,用于减少全球温室气体排放。这笔资金将主要用于减少石油、天然气和化学品生产的排放,包括将CO 2埋入地下。

环保人士表示,将减排与增加石油和天然气产量结合起来是短视的。“公司需要减少石油产量,而不仅仅是排放量,”环境组织德克萨斯州环境运动执行董事罗宾·施奈德说。

施耐德表示,正在开发太阳能和风能的欧洲石油公司正在提供更好的方法来利用当今的高油价来加速向可再生燃料的过渡。

二叠纪第一

埃克森美孚将从美国二叠纪盆地的 700 个地点开始,到 2030 年在全球范围内结束例行火炬燃烧。该公司安装了声学传感器、光学气体成像相机和额外的管道,并正在扩展技术,以便在需要时快速远程关闭运营。

其美国页岩油业务大部分位于新墨西哥州,该州是少数几个已经限制天然气燃烧的州之一。2022 年底,埃克森美孚在二叠纪盆地的火炬燃烧强度达到了 0.4%,仍然落后于挪威国家石油公司和巴西国家石油公司等面临更严格当地法规的竞争对手。

埃克森美孚与雪佛龙和英国石油公司都有共同的目标,即到 2030 年停止所有火炬燃烧。总部位于伦敦的壳牌公司出售了其大部分美国页岩油资产,目标是到 2025 年停止其全球大部分常规火炬燃烧。

根据国际能源署(IEA)的数据,全球燃烧的天然气量几乎相当于去年对莫斯科实施制裁之前欧洲每年从俄罗斯进口的所有天然气。

IEA 表示,按照去年美国 10 美元/MMBtu 的最高价格计算,排入大气中的废气价值达 550 亿美元。

原文链接/hartenergy

Exxon Halts Routine Gas Flaring in the Permian, Wants Others to Follow

Exxon Mobil is seeking tougher regulations on flaring to "level the playing field."

Sabrina Valle, Reuters

Exxon Mobil Corp. said it has stopped routine flaring of natural gas from production in the top U.S. shale basin and will press for stronger regulations for rivals to do the same, company officials said in an interview.

The largest U.S. oil producer is battling lawsuits that accuse it and other oil companies of contributing to global warming and rising sea levels. At the same time, it has moved to cut its own emissions and supported government efforts to crack down on oil and gas operators to find and fix gas leaks.

Exxon said its embrace of tighter methane regulation is designed to put oil and gas producers on equal footing. Methane, the main component of natural gas, is a potent greenhouse gas.

"It levels the playing field," Exxon's chief environmental scientist Matt Kolesar said in an interview. "We need strong regulations so it doesn't matter who owns the facility" or where they operate around the world.

Low hanging fruit

Burning less gas during production is an easy way to curb greenhouse gas emissions and increase gas production, according to consultants Rystad Energy.

Still, Exxon remains opposed to making oil companies responsible for emissions from the use of products sold to consumers. Some oil companies such as Europeans Shell and BP have included emissions by customers in their 2050 net-zero targets.

Exxon counters that focusing on methane, which can be up to 80 times more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, is a better route to slowing climate change.

"It is by far the most cost effective" decarbonization strategy available in the industry, Kolesar said.

As a next step, Exxon plans to launch a satellite to begin tracking greenhouse gas emissions in the Permian by year-end – the first of 24 satellites to be deployed globally in the next three years in association with climate monitoring firm Scepter Inc., said David Scott, Exxon's general manager in the basin.

Some changes to its production in the Permian have been minor, such as adding a small compressor to push natural gas to a pipeline. Those costs are more than offset by the value of the gas sold, Scott said.

Exxon is allocating $17 billion through 2027 to lower its greenhouse gas emissions globally. The money will primarily go toward reducing emissions from oil, gas and chemicals production, including burying CO2 underground.

Environmentalists say coupling emissions cuts with increased oil and gas production is short-sighted. "Companies need to reduce their oil production, not only emissions," says Robin Schneider, executive director with environmental group Texas Campaign for the Environment.

European oil companies that are moving to develop solar and wind power are offering a better approach to apply today's high oil prices to accelerate their transition to renewable fuels, Schneider said.

Permian first

Exxon is starting with 700 sites in the U.S. Permian basin to end routine flaring globally by 2030. It installed acoustic sensors, optical gas imaging cameras, additional pipelines and is expanding technology to quickly shut down operations remotely if needed.

Most of its U.S. shale operations are in New Mexico, one of the few states which already limits gas flaring. Exxon reached a flaring intensity of 0.4% at the end of 2022 in the Permian, still behind rivals like Norway's Equinor and Brazil's Petrobras, which face stricter local regulations.

Exxon's goal of halting all flaring by 2030 is shared by Chevron and BP. London-based Shell, which sold the bulk of its U.S. shale assets, aim to halt most of its global routine flaring by 2025.

The amount of gas flared globally is almost equivalent to all the natural gas Europe was importing annually from Russia before sanctions against Moscow last year, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

At last year's peak U.S. price of $10/MMBtu, the waste gas amounted to $55 billion sent into the atmosphere, the IEA said.