BP Will Erase Its Own CO2 Emissions by 2050, New CEO Says

LONDON (Capital Markets in Africa) – BP Plc pledged to achieve net-zero emissions from its own oil and gas operations and production by 2050 while halving the carbon intensity of all the products it sells, as its new boss sets out his vision for the future.

London-based BP became the latest fossil fuel giant to set out an ambitious, yet rather distant, the target for curbing emissions of planet-warming gases. The announcement from incoming Chief Executive Officer Bernard Looney shows BP is responding to pressure from major investors and activists with what he described as “industry-leading ambition.”

“The world’s carbon budget is finite and running out fast; we need a rapid transition to net-zero,” Looney said in a statement on Wednesday. “This will certainly be a challenge, but also a tremendous opportunity. It is clear to me, and to our stakeholders, that for BP to play our part and serve our purpose, we have to change.”

BP’s own operations emit the equivalent of about 55 million tons a year of carbon dioxide, while the carbon content of the oil and gas it pumps from the ground is 360 million tons, the company said. Looney plans to eliminate both those sets of emissions on a net basis by 2050 or earlier.

”This is what we mean by making BP net-zero,” Looney said. “It directly addresses all the carbon we get out of the ground as well as all the greenhouse gases we emit from our operations. These will be absolute reductions, which is what the world needs.”

BP also aims to reduce the carbon intensity of the products it sells by half by 2050 by offering customers more choice of low- and no-carbon products.

While Looney struck a confident tone, he faces an enormous task. For BP to survive the energy transition in a world that’s gradually falling out of love with oil, it will need to make big investments in new sources of clean energy, ensure cash keeps flowing from its fossil fuel assets, while also funneling generous returns to investors.

It’s a balancing act that its closest peer Royal Dutch Shell Plc is already struggling to master.

In the early 2000s, the company re-branded itself as “Beyond Petroleum” under another visionary CEO, John Browne. But big investments in solar power largely failed. In one of his last interviews before leaving office, Looney’s predecessor Bob Dudley warned against Big Oil moving too fast on new technologies to counter climate change, because their failure could lead to financial ruin.

However, circumstances are changing. Becoming greener is no longer a choice for the world’s largest polluters.

The damaging effects of rising global temperatures are increasingly evident and established investors are starting to worry about the vulnerability of their investment portfolios to a climate crisis. It was among the most debated subjects in this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos. Last month, BlackRock Inc. added its significant weight to a $41 trillion investor group that’s pressing the biggest emitters to change their ways.

The Church of England Commissioners, one of the activist investors that have been pressuring Big Oil, praised BP’s move.

“This is the ambition that the world needs,” Edward Mason, head of responsible investment, said in a tweet.

Source: Bloomberg Business News

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