Time - USA (2022-05-23)

(Antfer) #1

46 Time May 23/May 30, 2022


about the industry’s decades of climate
denial to make a moral case. Meanwhile,
college students pushed their universi-
ties to divest from fossil fuels, winning
some victories while pushing public
perception to grow more antagonistic
toward oil and gas.
These eforts made it harder to re-
cruit talent into the industry and left
companies increasingly vulnerable to
regulation. Still, nothing challenged
the industry’s attitude toward climate
as much as the change in tone from
investors. By 2020, according to the
Forum for Sustainable and Responsi-
ble Investment, some $17 trillion in in-
vestment had lowed into so-called ESG
investments—short for environmental,
social, and governance—and executives
felt the pressure to ofer a positive nar-
rative about how their companies were
approaching climate. “In the world of
money, everyone lives on bended knee,”
Brian Thomas, a managing director at
Prudential Private Capital, said at an
industry conference in March. “The
industry is beginning to kind of morph
its behavior to relect the concerns of its
investor base, right or wrong.”
Regardless of climate concerns, in-
vestors across the board fretted about
the dismal inancial performance of
oil and gas—the industry was failing
to make money and needed to be dis-
rupted. “The basic model is in pieces,
it’s fallen apart,” Tom Sanzillo, director
of inance at the Institute for Energy
Economics and Financial Analysis,
told me at the time. “This is an indus-
try in last place.”
Fossil-fuel companies embarked on
eforts to change; the approach varied
by company and region, but by and large
they were piecemeal and insuicient.
At an October 2021 hearing, mem-
bers of the House Oversight Commit-
tee asked executives from some of the
world’s largest oil and gas irms about
their plans to address climate change.
ExxonMobil CEO Woods cited the com-
pany’s investment in natural gas as an
emission- reducing tool. The CEO of
Chevron said his company would try to
emit less carbon in its operations.
In short, the scale of the industry’s
changes doesn’t match the science.
Mike Sommers, the head of the Amer-
ican Petroleum Institute, summed


it up in a January 2022 address. While
ofering an unequivocal declaration that
his industry needs to address climate
change, he made clear that the industry
would not shrink voluntarily. “We reject
eforts to scale back domestic produc-
tion,” he said. “This is about addition,
not subtraction.”

For a brieF moment, the Russian
invasion of Ukraine seemed to ofer an
opportunity for the energy industry to
change course. Following the initial
attacks, proponents of clean energy

lush with no-strings-attached cash
that could have been used to inance
a true pivot toward green initiatives.
But so far, companies have mostly
used the money to pay enormous div-
idends to shareholders and buy back
stock, thereby inlating the stock price.
ExxonMobil made $5.5 billion in the
irst quarter of 2022; it plans to spend
$30 billion buying back stock by 2023.
Chevron made more than $6 billion;
it said it would buy back $10 billion
by the end of the year. Shell made
$9.1 billion; it plans to repurchase
$8.5 billion in shares in the irst half of
the year alone.
The dynamic has led advocates, ac-
tivists, and politicians to rethink their
messaging. As consumers pay more
for energy, criticizing the industry for
its climate failures may not have the
same resonance it once did. A recent
CBS News poll found that although
the majority of Americans remain con-
cerned about climate change, the issue
has fallen on the list of priorities. Gas
prices, on the other hand, seem destined
for center stage as the U.S. approaches
congressional midterm elections.
And so the advocates have turned
their attention to the enormous proit
companies are making. The compa-
nies, these advocates say, should cut
the price of their product—or else face
a windfall- proit tax that would take
that money and return it to American
taxpayers. “We need an ofensive nar-
rative: we’re just saying, ‘Blame Putin,’
and they’re saying, ‘Blame Biden,’” says
Ro Khanna, a Democratic Representa-
tive from California who is chair of the
House Oversight Subcommittee on the
Environment. “That’s not enough. We
need to be saying, ‘Blame Big Oil.’ ”
On the surface, the pivot to talking
about the industry’s proit margin may
seem like an unfortunate turn away from
the urgent reality of pushing these com-
panies to slow fossil-fuel production.
But it cuts to the core of the challenge
the oil and gas industry poses to ad-
dressing climate change. Proits drove
the industry’s climate denial from the
beginning; proits are driving invest-
ment decisions today. When oil is truly
no longer a good investment, its reign
will come to an end. —With reporting
by mariah espada 

CLIMATE


‘IN THE WORLD


OF MONEY,


EVERYONE LIVES


ON BENDED


KNEE.’
—BRIAN THOMAS, MANAGING DIRECTOR,
PRUDENTIAL PRIVATE CAPITAL

suggested that the moment created
a unique chance for policymakers to
nudge the economy of fossil fuels.
After all, oil and gas paid for Vladi-
mir Putin’s war eforts and left peo-
ple around the world vulnerable to
the economic consequences of higher
fuel prices. The European Commis-
sion, the E.U.’s executive body, quickly
produced a plan to wean the bloc of
Russian gas with a dramatic proposal
to ramp up the development of clean-
energy infrastructure. But on the other
side of the Atlantic, the policy picture
has been less promising. Republicans
opposed to climate legislation have
used the spike in oil prices to blame
the Biden Administration’s climate ini-
tiatives for hurting consumers. And
the Administration has softened its
climate messaging, tempering it with
calls for greater oil and gas production
in the short term.
Still, even without government pol-
icy to serve as a nudge, the oil and gas
industry could have used the moment
to embrace a diferent course. As prices
rose, companies found themselves
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