Current:Home > MarketsRanking Oil Companies by Climate Risk: Exxon Is Near the Top -ChatGPT
Ranking Oil Companies by Climate Risk: Exxon Is Near the Top
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:07:18
ExxonMobil has more to lose than any other big oil and gas company as the world transitions to an economy with dramatically lower carbon dioxide emissions, a new ranking by the Carbon Tracker Initiative has found.
Up to half of the company’s projected capital expenditures through the year 2025 would go to projects that wouldn’t pay off if emissions are held low enough to keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius, the goal of the Paris Agreement on climate change, the report says.
Carbon Tracker’s work on stranded assets—investments that would be abandoned if the world reduces emissions of carbon dioxide from the use of fossil fuels—has been increasingly influential among shareholders who are demanding that energy companies fully disclose these risks. This is the first time the organization has ranked oil and gas companies by their potentially stranded assets.
Exxon is hardly alone, but it stands out in the crowd.
Among the international oil and gas giants, Exxon has the highest percentage of its capital expenditures going to high-cost projects, which would be the first to be abandoned if carbon emissions are tightly controlled. And because it is so big, it has the most emissions exceeding the “carbon budget” that the world must balance in order to keep warming within safe bounds. About a dozen companies have a higher percentage of their assets potentially stranded, but they are much smaller.
Among all the companies examined, about a third of projected spending on new projects would be wasted—$2.3 trillion in oil and gas investments down the drain, according to the report, which was published Tuesday by Carbon Tracker along with several European pension funds and a group backed by the United Nations.
Carbon Tracker’s analysis assumed the highest-cost projects, which also tend to generate greater emissions, would be the first stranded. At the top of the list are some projects in Canada’s tar sands—where Exxon is the largest international producer—along with deep water drilling and liquefied natural gas. The report also says 60 percent of U.S. domestic gas projects ought to go undeveloped.
The report was based on a snapshot of the industry and its costs, but those costs can change dramatically over a short time. In the past four years, for example, oil companies have slashed costs in the U.S. shale oil boom by more than half.
Last month, Exxon’s shareholders approved a resolution requiring the company to report on its climate risk.
James Leaton, Carbon Tracker’s research director, said the group wants to help identify specifically where the trouble may lie before it’s too late. The group looked at projected spending through 2025, and in many cases companies haven’t yet decided whether to invest in particular projects.
“That’s better for investors,” he said, “because it’s much harder to say, well you’ve already spent X billion on this, now we want you to give that back.”
veryGood! (7515)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Mummy's arm came off when museum mishandled body, Mexican government says
- 'Dance Moms' star Kelly Hyland reveals breast cancer diagnosis
- Kylie Jenner Reveals Where She Really Stands With Jordyn Woods
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Seattle police chief dismissed from top job amid discrimination, harassment lawsuits
- Missouri mom went to police station after killing her 2 young children, sheriff says
- Boeing reaches deadline for reporting how it will fix aircraft safety and quality problems
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Job scams are among the riskiest. Here's how to avoid them
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Boeing reaches deadline for reporting how it will fix aircraft safety and quality problems
- Chicago man who served 12 years for murder wants life back. Key witness in case was blind.
- Johns Hopkins team assessing nation’s bridges after deadly Baltimore collapse
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Ohio man gets probation after pleading guilty to threatening North Caroilna legislator
- Why Real Housewives of Dubai's Caroline Stanbury Used Ozempic During Midlife Crisis
- At 100, this vet says the ‘greatest generation’ moniker fits ‘because we saved the world.’
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Victoria Beckham Shares the Simple Reason She Keeps a “Very Disciplined” Diet
Wisconsin launches $100 million fund to help start-up companies, entrepreneurs
Pat Sajak celebrates 'Wheel of Fortune' contestant's mistake: 'We get to keep the money!'
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
ConocoPhillips buys Marathon Oil for $17.1 billion as energy giants scale up
Job scams are among the riskiest. Here's how to avoid them
Yankees manager Aaron Boone comes to umpire Ángel Hernández's defense after backlash