French oil giant Total CEO’s Patrick Pouyanne. His company and nine other oil majors have pledged funding as part of the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative. LONDON—Ten of the world’s biggest oil companies plan to invest an average of $100 million annually over the next 10 years in low-carbon technologies, the companies said Friday. The Oil and Gas Climate Initiative, which includes state-owned Saudi Arabian Oil Co., Royal Dutch Shell PLC and BP PLC, said its investments will initially focus on carbon capture and storage technology and efforts to reduce methane emissions from the oil-and-gas industry. Those efforts could significantly improve the prospects for the sector in a lower-emission world. The pledged funding is the latest sign of the oil industry’s efforts to respond to pressure from governments, activists and increasingly investors. The announcement came on the same day that a climate treaty negotiated in Paris last year by more than 200 countries to cap emissions and curb global warming comes into force, potentially limiting the use of fossil fuels such as oil and gas. Environmental groups said the oil companies’ pledge of $1 billion over a decade wasn’t close to enough and represents a tiny fraction of the group’s annual spending on finding and producing fossil fuels. It is a pledge of $10 million a year for each company, said Jeremy Leggett, chairman of the Carbon Tracker Initiative. “Given that the world has to mobilize trillions of dollars a year for clean energy within that time frame, if the Paris goal is to be realized, this is quite simply nowhere near good enough,” he said. The consortium said the joint fund is just the beginning of its efforts and comes on top of investments each company is making individually in alternative energy and lower-emission technology. “We’re doing a lot. We’re doing billions when you combine all the other activities we’ve got, and this is just the start,” BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley said. The companies are increasingly looking toward a future in which demand for their core products—oil and gas—could begin to wane. Total SA owns one of the largest solar companies in the world and earlier this year bought French battery maker Saft Group SA. Shell has created a “new energies” division to invest in renewables and low carbon power, and even Saudi Arabia is looking into developing solar power within the Kingdom. Simon Henry, Shell’s chief financial officer, said this week that the company thinks demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades, and as soon as in five years.ENLARGE Simon Henry, Shell’s chief financial officer, said this week that the company thinks demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades, and as soon as in five years. PHOTO:BLOOMBERG NEWS Shell Chief Financial Officer Simon Henrycaused a stir earlier this week when he said the company believes demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades and as soon as five years. Known as “peak demand,” the arrival of the day when consumer demand for oil stops growing has become a central worry for the fossil-fuel industry. “We’ve long been of the opinion that demand will peak before supply,” Mr. Henry told analysts Tuesday. “And that peak may be somewhere between five and 15 years hence, and it will driven by efficiency and substitution.” French President François Hollande, right, and the then French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, center at the World Climate Change Conference 2015.ENLARGE French President François Hollande, right, and the then French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, center at the World Climate Change Conference 2015. PHOTO:EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY The Oil and Gas Climate Initiative was created in 2014 with United Nations backing to find ways the industry can support efforts to tackle climate change while continuing to produce its reserves. Its members include giant state companies and Europe’s biggest oil producers, but not the biggest American companies, such as Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp.Together they pump about a fifth of the world’s oil and gas output. Each company has its own strategy, but technologies such as carbon capture and storage—which grabs carbon dioxide produced from industrial processes and funnels it back underground—and efforts to reduce methane emissions from gas production are crucial to extending the life of some of the industry’s assets. That is why the oil companies are focusing their collective efforts in these areas rather than alternative energy sources such as renewable technology. “Quite often the pushback that we get is, ‘Why don’t you put a lot of money behind these types of technologies?’ and I think really the competencies, the resources, the effort that we can bring to the party are better focused on the other 82% of the energy system,” Shell CEOBen van Beurden said.


LONDON—Ten of the world’s biggest oil companies plan to invest an average of $100 million annually over the next 10 years in low-carbon technologies, the companies said Friday.
The Oil and Gas Climate Initiative, which includes state-owned Saudi Arabian Oil Co., Royal Dutch Shell PLC and BP PLC, said its investments will initially focus on carbon capture and storage technology and efforts to reduce methane emissions from the oil-and-gas industry. Those efforts could significantly improve the prospects for the sector in a lower-emission world.
The pledged funding is the latest sign of the oil industry’s efforts to respond to pressure from governments, activists and increasingly investors. The announcement came on the same day that a climate treaty negotiated in Paris last year by more than 200 countries to cap emissions and curb global warming comes into force, potentially limiting the use of fossil fuels such as oil and gas.
Environmental groups said the oil companies’ pledge of $1 billion over a decade wasn’t close to enough and represents a tiny fraction of the group’s annual spending on finding and producing fossil fuels. It is a pledge of $10 million a year for each company, said Jeremy Leggett, chairman of the Carbon Tracker Initiative.
“Given that the world has to mobilize trillions of dollars a year for clean energy within that time frame, if the Paris goal is to be realized, this is quite simply nowhere near good enough,” he said.
The consortium said the joint fund is just the beginning of its efforts and comes on top of investments each company is making individually in alternative energy and lower-emission technology.
“We’re doing a lot. We’re doing billions when you combine all the other activities we’ve got, and this is just the start,” BP Chief Executive Bob Dudley said.
The companies are increasingly looking toward a future in which demand for their core products—oil and gas—could begin to wane.
Total SA owns one of the largest solar companies in the world and earlier this year bought French battery maker Saft Group SA. Shell has created a “new energies” division to invest in renewables and low carbon power, and even Saudi Arabia is looking into developing solar power within the Kingdom.
Simon Henry, Shell’s chief financial officer, said this week that the company thinks demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades, and as soon as in five years.ENLARGE
Simon Henry, Shell’s chief financial officer, said this week that the company thinks demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades, and as soon as in five years. PHOTO:BLOOMBERG NEWS
Shell Chief Financial Officer Simon Henrycaused a stir earlier this week when he said the company believes demand for oil could stop growing within the next two decades and as soon as five years. Known as “peak demand,” the arrival of the day when consumer demand for oil stops growing has become a central worry for the fossil-fuel industry.
“We’ve long been of the opinion that demand will peak before supply,” Mr. Henry told analysts Tuesday. “And that peak may be somewhere         between five and 15 years hence, and it will driven by efficiency and substitution.”
French President François Hollande, right, and the then French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, center at the World Climate Change Conference 2015.ENLARGE
French President François Hollande, right, and the then French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, center at the World Climate Change Conference 2015. PHOTO:EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
The Oil and Gas Climate Initiative was created in 2014 with United Nations backing to find ways the industry can support efforts to tackle climate change while continuing to produce its reserves. Its members include giant state companies and Europe’s biggest oil producers, but not the biggest American companies, such as Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp.Together they pump about a fifth of the world’s oil and gas output.
Each company has its own strategy, but technologies such as carbon capture and storage—which grabs carbon dioxide produced from industrial processes and funnels it back underground—and efforts to reduce methane emissions from gas production are crucial to extending the life of some of the industry’s assets.
That is why the oil companies are focusing their collective efforts in these areas rather than alternative energy sources such as renewable technology.
“Quite often the pushback that we get is, ‘Why don’t you put a lot of money behind these types of technologies?’ and I think really the competencies, the resources, the effort that we can bring to the party are better focused on the other 82% of the energy system,” Shell CEOBen van Beurden said.
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