Zürcher Nachrichten - World's fossil fuel assets risk evaporating in climate fight

EUR -
AED 3.76196
AFN 72.825383
ALL 97.661526
AMD 406.455099
ANG 1.845856
AOA 934.096418
ARS 1061.676768
AUD 1.664637
AWG 1.846171
AZN 1.745254
BAM 1.94433
BBD 2.067963
BDT 124.931812
BGN 1.954924
BHD 0.386077
BIF 3029.734771
BMD 1.024228
BND 1.400746
BOB 7.076807
BRL 6.24544
BSD 1.024238
BTN 88.143927
BWP 14.415092
BYN 3.35179
BYR 20074.871075
BZD 2.057325
CAD 1.477071
CDF 2939.535064
CHF 0.938936
CLF 0.037483
CLP 1034.276199
CNY 7.510362
CNH 7.541177
COP 4443.798043
CRC 516.990672
CUC 1.024228
CUP 27.142045
CVE 109.619961
CZK 25.059077
DJF 182.026224
DKK 7.460534
DOP 62.874019
DZD 139.324768
EGP 51.787641
ERN 15.363422
ETB 128.5206
FJD 2.394287
FKP 0.81117
GBP 0.83827
GEL 2.893486
GGP 0.81117
GHS 15.107064
GIP 0.81117
GMD 73.236254
GNF 8855.674242
GTQ 7.903302
GYD 214.282691
HKD 7.975198
HNL 26.047382
HRK 7.346692
HTG 133.799864
HUF 413.170041
IDR 16665.266888
ILS 3.778839
IMP 0.81117
INR 88.252258
IQD 1341.690215
IRR 43107.204744
ISK 144.727339
JEP 0.81117
JMD 160.59267
JOD 0.726592
JPY 161.60118
KES 132.566239
KGS 89.108205
KHR 4139.902227
KMF 489.632644
KPW 921.804732
KRW 1509.978935
KWD 0.315978
KYD 0.853532
KZT 540.533632
LAK 22347.916009
LBP 91717.227269
LKR 301.684791
LRD 191.52516
LSL 19.463993
LTL 3.02428
LVL 0.619546
LYD 5.062335
MAD 10.293231
MDL 19.142574
MGA 4849.770188
MKD 61.500061
MMK 3326.652968
MNT 3480.327005
MOP 8.213292
MRU 40.872892
MUR 47.96499
MVR 15.776942
MWK 1775.96238
MXN 21.223071
MYR 4.605446
MZN 65.451996
NAD 19.465693
NGN 1579.810801
NIO 37.687682
NOK 11.739093
NPR 141.0294
NZD 1.841789
OMR 0.394306
PAB 1.024238
PEN 3.853767
PGK 4.10584
PHP 60.110963
PKR 285.221963
PLN 4.265197
PYG 8042.187588
QAR 3.733675
RON 4.975397
RSD 117.107209
RUB 104.215736
RWF 1424.706986
SAR 3.844767
SBD 8.643891
SCR 14.612545
SDG 615.561445
SEK 11.482401
SGD 1.404683
SHP 0.81117
SLE 23.30157
SLL 21477.554582
SOS 585.293093
SRD 35.955567
STD 21199.454095
SVC 8.961052
SYP 2573.404118
SZL 19.461716
THB 35.544304
TJS 11.174057
TMT 3.584798
TND 3.287408
TOP 2.398849
TRY 36.286385
TTD 6.95253
TWD 33.883006
TZS 2564.118255
UAH 43.310348
UGX 3786.956672
USD 1.024228
UYU 44.716872
UZS 13269.915597
VES 55.086346
VND 25984.667305
VUV 121.598413
WST 2.829725
XAF 652.160866
XAG 0.033673
XAU 0.00038
XCD 2.768028
XDR 0.788709
XOF 652.11972
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.28923
ZAR 19.57788
ZMK 9219.285792
ZMW 28.293309
ZWL 329.801035
  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23

    -0.43%

  • SCS

    -0.3300

    10.97

    -3.01%

  • NGG

    -1.5600

    56.42

    -2.76%

  • BCC

    -1.6450

    115.755

    -1.42%

  • BTI

    -0.6050

    36.135

    -1.67%

  • GSK

    -0.5000

    33.25

    -1.5%

  • JRI

    -0.1000

    12.12

    -0.83%

  • BP

    0.3800

    31.5

    +1.21%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    46.58

    -0.41%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    7.1

    -1.41%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    59.09

    +0.78%

  • BCE

    -0.5750

    23.055

    -2.49%

  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    23.24

    -0.69%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    8.08

    -1.61%

  • AZN

    0.6600

    67.24

    +0.98%

World's fossil fuel assets risk evaporating in climate fight
World's fossil fuel assets risk evaporating in climate fight

World's fossil fuel assets risk evaporating in climate fight

Oil platforms, pipelines, coal power plants and other fossil fuel assets could lose trillions of dollars in the battle against climate change in the coming decades, experts say.

Text size:

The warning was issued in a 3,000-page report by UN experts who said fossil fuel assets must be retired and replaced with clean energy faster to mitigate financial losses.

Such assets will become "stranded" and worth less than expected because they may never be used since fossil fuel demand must fall in the near future to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Limiting warming to the aspirational 1.5 degree Celsius target in the Paris Agreement, or the more conservative 2C goal, "will strand fossil-related assets", said the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its latest report Monday.

"The combined global discounted value of the unburned fossil fuels and stranded fossil fuel infrastructure has been projected to be around 1–4 trillion dollars from 2015 to 2050 to limit global warming to approximately 2C, and it will be higher if global warming is limited to approximately 1.5C," the IPCC said.

Any move to alleviate the impact of climate change means using less fossil fuel, thus rendering assets obsolete as companies are under pressure to move away from harmful energy production.

The IPCC said that if current oil, gas and coal energy infrastructure were to operate for their designed lifetime -- without technology to capture and store carbon -- capping global warming at the 1.5C target would be impossible.

It said nations should stop burning coal completely and cut oil and gas use by 60 and 70 percent respectively by 2050 to keep within the Paris deal goals, noting that both solar and wind were now cheaper than fossil fuels in many places.

The idea of "stranded assets" dates back to the 2010s and was put forward by think tank Carbon Tracker.

Companies could be further affected by governments taking decisions such as increasing the price of coal or even banning certain energies.

Consumers could also turn to other products like electric vehicles.

Other assets impacted include infrastructure such as drilling platforms, which have become useless quicker than expected.

Some fossil fuel reserves will become too costly to exploit due to falling prices.

- Risky bets -

For the IPCC, coal-related assets are the most vulnerable before 2030, than those that are oil- and gas-related towards mid-century.

The idea of stranded assets, taken up by both environmentalists and investors, has gained popularity and has been used in shareholder meetings of energy companies such as ExxonMobil or TotalEnergies.

The climate issue has in fact become central to some companies, even if it has taken three decades after the IPCC's creation in 1988.

"It's really the financial risk that originally created this spark, which took a long time," said Hugues Chenet, research associate at Polytechnique and the University College London.

That "convinced financial actors there was a problem."

The idea of "stranded assets" -- which Chenet prefers to call "obsolete" -- has made it possible to pinpoint a "contradiction".

There is one "path that says we must live without fossil fuels, facing an economy that is rather more geared up to do the opposite".

Lucie Pinson of NGO Reclaim Finance, who does not find the climate commitments of major companies like TotalEnergies credible, also pointed out the inconsistency.

"We can see that (TotalEnergies) doesn't believe in its own (climate) rhetoric, because if it believed it, it would not develop projects which have no future," she added.

- Revenue losses -

It's decision time for countries which get revenue from fossil fuels.

From Azerbaijan to Angola to Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, oil producers risk losing a significant amount of their revenue over the next 20 years, warned Carbon Tracker.

But "if they continue to invest, you're betting on the failure of policy action on climate but you're also betting on the failure of renewables and other low carbon technologies to displace oil and gas", said Carbon Tracker's Mike Coffin, who calls on countries to diversify.

Another risky bet would be to ignore acting against climate change, hoping to make profits from oil and gas.

But "you'll lose way more on all your other assets when you've got forest fires, global migrations, famine," he said.

T.L.Marti--NZN