石油价格


自去年俄罗斯入侵乌克兰和能源危机以来,全球最大的国际石油和天然气巨头已经改变了中长期战略的基调。所有欧洲巨头继续以到 2050 年实现净零排放为目标,但包括英国石油公司 (BP) 和壳牌公司在内的一些最大的公司已经缩减了削减石油和天然气产量的承诺,并表示将向世界提供化石燃料能源只要它需要。

能源安全优先于大型石油公司的 ESG 议程 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:石油价格

考虑到世界 80% 以上的一次能源消费仍然依赖化石燃料,从商业角度来看,对于拥有核心石油和天然气业务的公司来说,加倍努力继续开采石油和天然气并不算离谱。气体。在一个频繁繁荣和萧条的周期性行业中,他们很难回报股东。但近十年来,大型石油公司也受到投资者 ESG 运动的强烈压力,要求其承诺更快地减少排放,包括其销售产品的范围 3 排放。

在能源危机中,供应安全先于减排

继去年俄罗斯入侵乌克兰引发能源危机并颠覆了全球石油和天然气流动之后,国际巨头已将重心转向石油和天然气生产,并表示化石燃料将继续对能源系统至关重要,直到足够成熟,可以主要依靠低碳能源运行。

 根据英国石油公司此前发布的一份备受关注的年度报告《2023 年能源研究所世界能源统计回顾》,化石燃料消费占一次能源的比例 在 2022 年将稳定在 82% 。

与此同时,能源相关排放继续强劲反弹,2022年达到创纪录的393亿吨二氧化碳当量,比2021年增长0.8%。能源消费排放占全球总排放的87%。到审查。

国际能源署(IEA)在3月份发布的《2022年二氧化碳排放》 报告中表示 ,2022年全球能源相关二氧化碳排放量将增长0.9%,创下新高,尽管增长速度低于担忧。国际能源署 表示,由于去年创纪录的天然气价格,煤炭排放量的增加取代了部分天然气消耗,这足以抵消天然气排放量的减少,而石油排放量的增长甚至超过煤炭排放量。

尽管排放量创历史新高,但大型石油公司今年不顾环保主义者和具有 ESG 意识的投资者的说法,表示石油和天然气是太重要的能源,在能源转型中不能轻易忽视。

壳牌和英国石油公司今年早些时候表示,他们将比之前的计划更多地投资于有弹性的石油和天然气项目,并将 在更长的时间内开采更多的碳氢化合物 ,以满足世界的需求。

“没有唯一的解决方案。 壳牌首席执行官瓦尔·萨万 (Wael Sawan)在 6 月的资本市场日上表示,至关重要的是,世界要避免拆除当前能源系统的速度快于我们建设未来清洁能源系统的速度 。

“在未来很长一段时间内,石油和天然气将继续在能源系统中发挥至关重要的作用,需求只会随着时间的推移而逐渐减少。由于我刚才提到的能源需求不断增长,以及近年来的自然下降和严重的投资不足,对石油和天然气的持续投资对于确保平衡的能源转型至关重要。”

 萨万几周后告诉英国广播公司,减少全球石油和天然气产量将是“危险且不负责任的”,因为世界仍然迫切需要这些碳氢化合物 。

供应能力 

 本周,加拿大油砂公司、沙特阿美公司和超级巨头等公司的石油高管将参加在加拿大卡尔加里举行的第 24 届世界石油大会,供应的安全性、可承受性和可持续性成为争论的关键主题 此次活动的主题是“能源转型:实现净零排放之路”。

大型石油公司尚未放弃净零排放。但它也没有放弃石油和天然气。相反,高管们最近的声明表明,公司现在将寻求开发更多的石油和天然气资源,重点是降低排放,并仔细规划对低碳能源的投资,为股东创造价值,而不是让世界挨饿。传统能源,尽管它仍然需要它们。


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


The world’s largest international oil and gas majors have changed their tune on medium to long-term strategies since the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the energy crisis last year. All European majors continue to target net-zero emissions by 2050, but some of the biggest, including BP and Shell, have scaled back promises to cut back oil and gas production and have signaled they would be there to provide the world with fossil fuel energy as long as it needs it.

Energy security trumps ESG agenda for big oil- oil and gas 360

Source: Oil Price

Considering that the world still depends on fossil fuels for more than 80% of its primary energy consumption, it’s not outrageous – from a business perspective – for companies with core oil and gas business to double down on continued extraction of oil and gas. They are hard pressed to reward shareholders in a cyclical industry with frequent booms and busts. But this decade Big Oil has also been hard pressed by the ESG movement from investors to commit to reducing emissions faster, including Scope 3 emissions from the products they sell.

Security Of Supply Precedes Emissions Reduction Amid Energy Crisis

Following last year’s energy crisis in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and upended global oil and gas flows, international majors have pivoted back to oil and gas production, saying that fossil fuels will continue to be critical for the energy system until it matures enough to run mostly on low-carbon energy.

Fossil fuel consumption as a percentage of primary energy remained steady at 82% in 2022, according to the 2023 Energy Institute Statistical Review of World Energy, a closely-watched annual report previously produced by BP.

At the same time, energy-related emissions continued to rebound strongly, reaching a record high of 39.3 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2022, or a 0.8% increase over 2021. Emissions from energy consumption contributed 87% of total global emissions, according to the review.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said in its own CO2 Emissions in 2022 report in March that global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions increased by 0.9% to reach a new record high in 2022, although the pace of growth was lower than feared. Higher emissions from coal – which replaced some gas consumption due to the record gas prices last year – more than offset lower emissions from gas, while emissions from oil grew even more than emissions from coal, the IEA said.

Despite the record emissions, Big Oil defied environmentalists and ESG-minded investors by saying this year that oil and gas are too important energy sources to be easily dismissed in the energy transition.

Shell and BP said earlier this year that they would invest more in resilient oil and gas projects than previously planned and would pump more hydrocarbons for longer to meet the world’s needs.

“There is no one solution. It is critical that the world avoids dismantling the current energy system faster than we are able to build the clean energy system of the future,” Shell’s CEO Wael Sawan said on Capital Markets Day in June.

“Oil and gas WILL continue to play a crucial role in the energy system for a long time to come, with demand reducing only gradually over time. Continued investment in oil and gas is critical to ensure a balanced energy transition, because of the growing energy demand I just mentioned, as well as natural decline rates and severe underinvestment in recent years.”

Reducing global oil and gas production would be “dangerous and irresponsible” as the world still desperately needs those hydrocarbons, Sawan told the BBC a few weeks later.

Affordability Of Supply 

Security, affordability, and sustainability of supply are key themes in debates as oil executives from companies, including Canada’s oil sands, Saudi Aramco, and the supermajors, are taking part in the 24th World Petroleum Congress in Calgary, Canada, this week. The main theme of the event is “Energy Transition: The Path to Net Zero.”

Big Oil hasn’t ditched net zero. But it hasn’t ditched oil and gas, either. On the contrary, recent statements from executives signal that companies would now be looking to develop more oil and gas resources with a focus on lower emissions and carefully plan their investments in low-carbon energies to create value for shareholders and not leave the world starving of conventional energy sources while it still needs them.