Showing posts with label xom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label xom. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

ExxonMobil Confronts the Carbon Bubble

  • Companies and investors are squaring off over the potential impact of government climate policies on asset values, particularly in the fossil fuel industry.

  • ExxonMobil gave its shareholders data and assurances of asset resilience under various policies but dismissed the scenario of greatest interest to sustainability investors.

Last fall I devoted a lengthy post to the notion that future policies to address climate change expose investors in companies producing fossil fuels to a potential bubble in asset valuations. So although I am not an ExxonMobil shareholder, I was particularly interested when the company issued a report last month responding to specific shareholder concerns along these lines. Although the term “carbon asset bubble” did not appear in the report, its references to carbon budgets and the risk of stranded assets in a low-carbon scenario were aimed directly at this emerging meme.

Unsurprisingly, ExxonMobil’s management reassured investors that, “none of our hydrocarbon reserves are now or will become ‘stranded’.” Wisely avoiding past tendencies to question interpretations of climate science, their analysis appears to be grounded in mainstream views of climate change. It focuses on the costs and achievability of an extreme low-carbon scenario, and on the resilience of the company’s portfolio under various climate policies.

Exxon's analysis is based on the company’s latest Outlook for Energy, an annual global forecast broadly similar to the main “New Policies” scenario of the International Energy Agency (IEA). It has fewer similarities to the IEA’s “450″ scenario that underpins carbon bubble claims. The company expects energy demand to grow at an average of about 1% annually over the next three decades–faster than population but much slower than the global economy–with increasing efficiency and a gradual shift toward lower-emission energy sources: Gas increases faster than oil and by more BTUs in total, while coal grows for a while longer but then shrinks back to current levels. Renewables grow fastest of all, producing about as much energy in 2040 as nuclear power does today. As a result of these shifts global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions peak around 2030 and then decline gradually.

That forecast won’t impress those advocating prompt and aggressive changes in the global energy mix to head off serious climate change, but it is not very different from the most recent global forecast of the US government’s Energy Information Administration. If anything, Exxon expects slower growth of energy and emissions than the EIA.

Ultimately, ExxonMobil's argument that it isn’t running outsized carbon asset risks depends heavily on its estimate of the implicit costs of achieving a much deeper and more rapid transition to renewables, compared to its--and others’--forecasts. It gauges this on the intensity of governments’ future climate policies, expressed in terms of their effective cost per ton of CO2 abated, and on the affordability of such measures to energy consumers, especially in the developing world, where emissions are increasing rapidly.

Without directly disputing the technical feasibility of achieving such large and rapid emissions cuts, the company's management essentially questions whether any government would or could impose the extraordinary costs necessary for that to occur. Their proxy estimate of $200/ton of CO2 for such policies is sobering. Even if the sums that would raise were all efficiently recycled by those governments–a heroic assumption–the resulting diversion of investment and increase in energy costs would adversely affect overall economic development.

The sustainable investor groups that raised this issue with ExxonMobil were apparently disappointed with the answer they got. That's not surprising, but having participated in similar exercises at Texaco, Inc., I think ExxonMobil went well beyond the kind of perfunctory reply the investors might have expected. In particular, it has provided enough data to support a more serious dialog with investors on this subject.

For example, Exxon indicated that it “stress tests” its projects and acquisitions at proxy costs of up to $80/ton of CO2, compared to current levels of $8-10/ton in the EU’s Emission Trading System. Implicit in that is the question of whether investors would reasonably expect them to test projects at $200/ton., which would equate to around $100 per average barrel of oil--roughly today's price--based on the nifty “seriatim” chart at the end of the report.

The document also includes information addressing the resiliency of the company’s assets and operations under a lower-carbon future, with their emphasis on natural gas and a global average cost of production under $12 per oil-equivalent-barrel (BOE). Climate policies would have to raise those costs and shrink the associated revenues very significantly to jeopardize current production, nor are low oil prices generally consistent with a low-carbon world. Investments in future production are another matter, though Exxon refers to the IEA’s 450 scenario to demonstrate how much additional oil and gas development would still be required in the next 20 years, even in a world that was determined to constrain global temperature increases to no more than 2°C.

ExxonMobil’s response to investors will not end the debate over the carbon bubble. While providing a lot of information, the company essentially argued that the extreme low-carbon scenario associated with the risks of a carbon bubble is irrelevant, because it can’t be achieved any time soon, irrespective of the risks associated with current emissions levels. That is close to my own view, but it is unlikely to resonate with those who are more focused on the risks of climate change than on the nuts and bolts of what it would take to avert them.

Interestingly, the company’s report on carbon risks was issued on the same day as the latest iteration of the predicted consequences of further warming from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In a sense each report provides context for the other, so that investors who accept the IPCC’s analysis can weigh the potential costs of global warming against the cost and scale of the changes that would be required to put the world on a crash program to avert the worst climate-change-related outcomes. They can then buy or sell accordingly.

A different version of this posting was previously published on Energy Trends Insider.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Crossing the Rubicon?

Although I haven't made any great study of the history of shareholder revolts, I suspect that it is fairly unusual for one to occur when a company is enjoying record earnings, not only relative to its own past performance, but when compared against the performance of any firm in any industry at any time. And yet, that's where ExxonMobil finds itself today, with no less a group of stakeholders than the descendants of the firm's founding dynasty weighing in on the subject of its investment choices, particularly with regard to alternative energy. The Rockefellers have been joined in this effort by other investors and shareholder advisers. Whatever you may think about the shareholder resolutions in question, or indeed about the issues that they raise, the corporation's Annual Meeting is precisely the right venue for addressing them.

You might recall that when I wrote about a recent Congressional hearing on oil prices, I wasn't terribly sympathetic to the way that Chairman Markey pilloried ExxonMobil for pursuing alternative energy less enthusiastically than some of its competitors, or than the Congress might wish. When the Congress or the President can direct the portfolio decisions of publicly-traded companies on matters that do not involve their compliance with any known law or regulation, our political and economic system will have lost all resemblance to the one established by the Founders. However, the management and board of a corporation are still answerable on such issues to their shareholders, however silent the latter may be most of the time, especially when a company's fortunes are prospering.

Many of my readers regard investing in renewable energy as an obvious choice at this juncture, in light of the uncertainties of climate change and Peak Oil, more restrictive access to resources, and the rapid technological changes sweeping the global energy sector. I have long believed and advised that any integrated energy corporation that doesn't participate in the development of alternative energy puts its future success and image at risk. However, that doesn't mean that a company's management can't weigh all of these factors and conclude that it is still better off focusing on the areas in which it has excelled, a strategy that the landmark business text, "In Search of Excellence" referred to as "Sticking to the Knitting"--one of a handful of key lessons the authors gleaned from their study of successful companies. (Among other things, Peters and Waterman also extolled "A Bias for Action" and experimentation.)

The question that ExxonMobil's shareholders are effectively posing is whether its otherwise admirable capital discipline prevents management from seeing the long-term potential of a set of developments that could prove as significant as the original oil boom 150 years ago. John D. Rockefeller's vision of the growth of an oil-based economy, and how to capitalize on it, made Standard Oil--the precursor of the modern ExxonMobil--one of the most successful organizations in history, even after being broken up and only partially reassembled in the late 1990s. Even if you are skeptical, as I am, that we are on the verge of ending oil's key role as a source of primary energy and a superior energy carrier, it seems quite likely that the winners of the ongoing competition to crack the challenges of biofuels, solar power, and other alternatives will make new, Rockefeller-scale fortunes. A company should only turn its back on that kind of opportunity after some serious soul-searching and a frank discussion with its owners.

Some perspective seems necessary, as well. While the shareholder challenge to Exxon's management is a significant event within the larger trend of the greening of business, it would be a mistake to view it as a crusade. If the proposals currently being voted on by ExxonMobil's owners succeed, they will not end America's addiction to oil or bring the millennium. If they fail, that will not signify that we have passed the baton of moral or technological leadership to any other country or group of countries. The alternative energy revolution will stand or fall on its own merits, with or without Exxon. The company's shareholders must now decide whether or not the reverse is also true. Although I'm not endorsing any of these resolutions, I sincerely hope that both sides treat this as a unique and valuable opportunity to rethink their assumptions, scenarios and strategies concerning the future of energy.


I don't own any ExxonMobil stock, except in the manner in which millions of Americans do, as a component of various mutual funds.