2015: Tough times ahead for big oil
Let's make 2015 the year that puts an end once and for all to the
myth that fossil fuels are an inevitable centerpiece of our future.
by Hannah McKinnon
Things don't seem to be getting any easier for Big Oil and I am going
to venture a guess that 2015 is going to be their toughest year yet.

Factories that burn fossil fuels help cause global warming. |
Here are a few of the hurdles that are only going to grow for the
industry over the coming year:
The science
You can ignore the science, resist the science, or support politics
that doesn't believe in science, but you can't change the science. 2014
captured the title of hottest year on record, marking the 38th
consecutive year that global temperatures have been above average.
California is still grappling with the impacts of the biggest drought
in memory, and "once in a century" storms, floods, fires, and droughts
have become a joke as they hit with increasing frequency.
Big Oil can't change the fact that their product is driving dangerous
climate change, nor the fact that if the world is going to avoid the
worst of it, the majority of fossil fuels that we know exist are going
to have to stay underground. The science is definitive and decision
makers are running out of ways to avoid taking it seriously.
The people
People get it. 400,000 of them came to the biggest climate march in
history in New York in September with tens of thousands more joining
marches in hundreds of cities around the world. Across North America,
people are stopping tar sands pipelines.
There is not a single major tar sands pipeline that is not threatened
by public opposition on the continent, and these delays are making a
dent in pollution and are a material risk to fossil fuel expansion.
The economics
Driving and inspiring much of this opposition is resistance from
people on the front lines of climate change and fossil fuel extraction:
First Nations in Alberta standing up to the tar sands, landowners in
Nebraska saying no to the inevitable risks of Keystone XL, and
vulnerable and impacted communities globally refusing to let climate
impacts go unnoticed. This movement is growing by the minute.
Even before the precipitous fall of oil prices in late 2014, fossil
fuel projects were being cancelled in places like the tar sands and the
Arctic Ocean. It is quite simply not great economics to bet the farm on
high cost, high risk, and high carbon projects. Even with oil prices
over 100$ per barrel in early 2014, three major tar sands projects were
mothballed due to uncertain economics (driven in large part by public
concern and transportation constraints).
Now, with oil prices a shadow of what they were kicking off 2014,
analysts say at least $59 billion dollars of capital is on the brink of
deferral in the tar sands over the coming three years, with the
potential of knocking off 650,000 barrels of oil per day.
Bad news for big oil, great news for the climate. Countries and
regions that made the high risk bet to balance their budgets based on
high oil prices are scrambling, and everyone is absorbing the harsh
reminder that oil prices are unstable, unpredictable, and uncertain.
The concepts of stranded assets and unburnable carbon gained even
more traction over the past year, with the Governor of the Bank of
England saying in no uncertain terms that the majority of fossil fuel
reserves are unburnable. This echoed messages from the likes of the
International Energy Agency and the World Bank - not exactly
environmental activists. The mainstream economic chatter is changing. On
top of this are the people-powered movements calling for divestment from
fossil fuels. These campaigns are moving billions; not enough to topple
the industry, but enough to command attention and prove that this
conversation has the moral magnitude of other historic successful
divestment campaigns.
The politics
Admittedly, this is the slow moving beast. The perpetual challenge is
getting politics and politicians to look beyond terms and think about
the well being of anything more than 4 or 8 years down the road.
Especially when this means turning their backs on the fossil fuel lobby,
which has been pouring money into keeping friendly politicians in power
for decades.
That said - all hope is not lost. President Obama has made some
inspiring and ambitious remarks on climate, and with a final Keystone
decision sitting on his desk, recent statements suggest he is poised to
make the right call, change the status quo, and reject the pipeline.
The climate deal between China and the U.S. is also promising and
shifted the global political discussions in a meaningful way. Across the
continent, politicians are feeling the heat on their inaction on climate
change. In Canada, heading into an election year, poll-leading
opposition leaders are starting to backtrack on previous support for
major tar sands infrastructure.
The message is starting to penetrate: A failure to act on climate
change will have political costs.
The competition
Renewables are putting a squeeze on fossil fuels. Solar energy had
some spectacular breakthroughs in 2014 and the growth in solar capacity
in the first three quarters of last year represented 36 percent of new
electricity capacity in the U.S. (compared to 9.6 % in 2012). In
Germany, solar generated half of the country's electricity on one day in
June, setting both records and precedent for what we can expect from the
rapidly improving and increasingly affordable technology.
Other leaps have been made in the sector, with wind and
electrification of transport. Low oil prices are an obvious risk to
renewables, especially in a world where fossil fuels continue to receive
unnecessary subsidies and renewables are forced to play on an uneven
playing field (it is high time to Stop Funding Fossils by the way).
However, Bloomberg has done some number crunching that suggests that
we should not assume that demand for oil would soar with the price drop
and analysts are saying that energy markets today are markedly evolved
and renewables will hold their own.
Paris
In late 2015, Paris will host the climate talks, the meeting where
global leaders are supposed to hammer out the next big deal. While we
are not holding our breath for leaders to rise to the occasion in any
spectacular way, one thing we are certain about is that they are going
to feel the heat.
Let's make 2015 the year that puts an end once and for all to the
myth that fossil fuels are an inevitable centerpiece of our future. The
real inevitability is an era where Big Oil is no longer the status quo,
and where we build our communities, economies, and lives around energy
that that is safe, reliable, and clean.
- Third World Network Features |