商业/经济

“商机”:ESG 为非常规资源铺平道路

Kimmeridge Energy 的一位高管在非常规资源技术会议上表示,他希望“让非常规资源可以投资于低碳世界”。

木块上的 ESG 和未来环境保护和可持续 ESG 现代化发展,利用可再生资源技术减少污染和碳排放。
资料来源:Khanchit Khirisutchalual/Getty Images

一位私募股权高管在 2023 年非常规资源技术会议 (URTeC)开幕式上发言时表示,到 2050 年实现净零目标将要求石油和天然气行业将 ESG 措施视为商机,而不是挑战。6 月 13 日在科罗拉多州丹佛市。

除了能源行业、学术界和政府机构之间的持续合作外,实现净零排放还需要更多努力。私募股权公司 Kimmeridge Energy 的管理合伙人尼尔·麦克马洪 (Neil McMahon) 表示,要获得这些资金,需要更多的资本和接受 ESG 措施。

“未来 20 到 30 年,世界将继续长期需要非常规能源以及可再生能源,”麦克马洪告诉与会者。

“但这必须在受监管或市场力量影响的低碳世界中进行。我们相信,消费者最终想要的是具有低碳足迹的低成本供应。”

麦克马洪表示,通过直接空气捕获、封存和基于自然的解决方案抵消碳足迹的现有石油和天然气资产可以与与电力存储相结合的可再生能源竞争。

“但是,碳的价格和存储的价格对于未来十年将演变的这种平衡至关重要,”他说,并补充说,目前替代能源的资本流动强劲,而资本流动疲软现有的传统能源资产引发了担忧。

“由于需要对新供应进行更多投资,流量减少可能会带来高回报。这是受到 ESG 和投资者没有投入资金的影响。”

为了说明上游石油和天然气需要更多投资的必要性,麦克马洪指出,2019年约有400亿美元的私募股权资本投资于上游石油和天然气,到2022年这一数字将减少至40亿美元。

“大家都知道,每当缺乏投资导致供应减少、价格上涨时,这个行业会发生什么,”他说。

相比之下,替代能源领域的公司正在重复非常规页岩气繁荣的错误,资本关注的是销量增长而不是盈利能力,正如麦克马洪的演示幻灯片中所述。

麦克马洪表示,他希望“将非常规资源投资于低碳世界”;实现这一目标的关键是优先考虑 ESG 目标。

“在当今世界,我们必须能够看待 ESG,并将其视为一个商机,而不是许多人所描述的问题。我们所做的一切都涉及 ESG,使我们的资产更容易出售。”他说。

作为一名激进投资者,Kimmeridge 相信变革将来自行业内部。

“我们发现的一件大事是,通过同行压力和积极行动,通过植树和产生排放抵消,该行业可以向前发展,直到不再需要碳氢化合物,”他说。“有一种方法可以做到这一点,我们相信我们可以处于推动公司进入这个领域和这个世界的最前沿。需要非常规资源来满足全球能源需求。我们需要让它们具有可投资性,并且它们需要与当今世界相关。”

原文链接/jpt
Business/economics

'Business Opportunity': ESG Paves Way Forward for Unconventional Resources

A Kimmeridge Energy executive said at the Unconventional Resources Technology Conference that he wants to "make unconventional resources investable in a low-carbon world."

words ESG on a wood block and Future environmental conservation and sustainable ESG modernization development by using the technology of renewable resources to reduce pollution and carbon emission.
Source: Khanchit Khirisutchalual/Getty Images

Reaching the net-zero goal by 2050 will require the oil and gas industry to see ESG measures as business opportunities, not as challenges, according to one private-equity executive that spoke at the opening of the 2023 Unconventional Resources Technology Conference (URTeC)on 13 June in Denver, Colorado.

In addition to continued collaboration between the energy industry, academia, and governmental agencies, reaching net zero will require more. It will require more capital and acceptance of ESG measures to attain those dollars, according to Neil McMahon, managing partner at private-equity firm Kimmeridge Energy.

“The world will continue to need unconventional energy for a long period along with renewables over the next 20 to 30 years,” MacMahon told attendees.

"But it must be done in a low-carbon world influenced by regulation or market forces. We believe that what consumers want at the end of the day is a low-cost supply with a low-carbon footprint."

McMahon said existing oil and gas assets that offset their carbon footprint through direct air capture, sequestration, and nature-based solutions could compete with renewable power paired with power storage.

“But the price of carbon and the price of storage will be critical in this balance that will evolve over the next decade,” he said, adding that the flow of capital into alternative energy is currently strong, and the weak flow of capital into existing conventional energy assets creates concern.

“This reduced flow could lead to high returns due to the need for more investment into new supplies. That has been influenced by ESG and investors not putting money into it.”

To give an idea of the need for more investment into upstream oil and gas, McMahon noted that in 2019 about $40 billion in private-equity capital was invested into upstream oil and gas, which decreased to $4 billion in 2022.

“We all know what happens in this industry whenever there's a lack of investment that leads to curtailed supply and therefore prices going up,” he said.

In contrast, companies in the alternative energy space are repeating the mistakes of the unconventional shale boom with capital focused on volume growth over profitability, as stated on McMahon’s presentation slide.

McMahon said he wants to “make unconventional resources investable in a low-carbon world;” the key to accomplishing that is through prioritizing ESG objectives.

“In this current world, we must be able to look at ESG and see it as a business opportunity, not as the issue which many portray it to be. Everything we do involves ESG, making our assets more sellable,” he said.

As an activist investor, Kimmeridge believes that change will come from within the industry.

“One of the big things we find is, through peer pressure and activism, that by planting trees and generating emission offsets, the industry can be taken forward until the point where hydrocarbons are no longer needed,” he said. “There is a way to do this, and we believe we can be at the forefront of pushing companies into this space and this world. Unconventional resources are required to meet global energy demand. We need to make them investable, and they need to be relevant in the current world.”