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Sunday, March 30, 2025

At Davos, climate debate over role of oil in ‘going green’

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1040 days ago
20220524
John F. Kerry, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate of the United States, gestures during a news conference at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, May 24, 2022. The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum is taking place in Davos from May 22 until May 26, 2022. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

John F. Kerry, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate of the United States, gestures during a news conference at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday, May 24, 2022. The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum is taking place in Davos from May 22 until May 26, 2022. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

By PE­TER PRENGA­MAN | AS­SO­CI­AT­ED PRESS

 

DAVOS, Switzer­land (AP) — As gov­ern­ment of­fi­cials, cor­po­rate lead­ers and oth­er elites at the World Eco­nom­ic Fo­rum grap­ple with how to con­front cli­mate change and its dev­as­tat­ing ef­fects, a cen­tral ques­tion is emerg­ing: to what ex­tent can oil and gas com­pa­nies be part of a tran­si­tion to low­er-car­bon fu­els?

In dif­fer­ent times the ques­tion could have been aca­d­e­m­ic, the kind of thing crit­ics of the fo­rum, which takes place in a tony ski vil­lage in the Swiss Alps, would say had no rel­e­vance to the re­al world. But to­day, the ques­tion is both prac­ti­cal and ur­gent, as Rus­sia’s in­va­sion of Ukraine has forced many coun­tries that de­pend­ed on Russ­ian oil and gas to make swift changes to en­er­gy sup­plies.

The de­bate comes as ex­am­ples of acute­ly felt im­pacts of cli­mate change mul­ti­ply, in­clud­ing re­cent heat waves in South­east Asia to flood­ing in parts of South Amer­i­ca. Mean­while, the world’s top cli­mate sci­en­tists have re­peat­ed­ly warned that in­creased in­vest­ment in fos­sil fu­els are hurt­ing chances to lim­it warm­ing to 1.5 C (2.7 F), and thus avoid even more dev­as­tat­ing ef­fects.

“We should not al­low a false nar­ra­tive to be cre­at­ed that what has hap­pened in Ukraine some­how ob­vi­ates the need to move for­ward and ad­dress the cli­mate cri­sis,” said U.S. cli­mate en­voy John Ker­ry on Tues­day, speak­ing on a pan­el about en­er­gy tran­si­tion.

Ker­ry added that it was pos­si­ble to both meet the need of in­creased en­er­gy from fos­sil fu­els in the short-term, par­tic­u­lar­ly in Eu­rope, and stay on course to re­duce emis­sions over the com­ing years.

Mean­while, Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion pres­i­dent Ur­su­la von der Leyen made a dif­fer­ent ar­gu­ment to ur­gent­ly move to­ward re­new­able en­er­gies: she warned the 27-na­tion bloc should avoid be­com­ing de­pen­dent on un­trust­wor­thy coun­tries, like it did with fos­sil fu­els from Rus­sia, as it moves to­ward a green­er econ­o­my.

She said the “economies of the fu­ture” will no longer re­ly on oil and coal but the green and dig­i­tal tran­si­tions will re­ly on oth­er ma­te­ri­als like lithi­um, sil­i­con met­al or rare earth per­ma­nent mag­nets which are re­quired for bat­ter­ies, chips, elec­tric ve­hi­cles or wind tur­bines.

“For many of them, we re­ly on a hand­ful of pro­duc­ers in the world. So, we must avoid falling in­to the same trap as with oil and gas. We should not re­place old de­pen­den­cies with new ones.”

Von der Leyen added that the war in Ukraine has strength­ened Eu­rope’s de­ter­mi­na­tion to get rid of Russ­ian fos­sil fu­els rapid­ly. EU coun­tries have ap­proved an em­bar­go on coal im­ports from Rus­sia, but mem­ber coun­tries have yet to find a deal on sanc­tions on Rus­sia’s oil and gas.

At­ten­dees in Davos this week will dis­cuss sev­er­al oth­er high-pri­or­i­ty is­sues, like the Rus­sia-Ukraine war, the threat of ris­ing hunger world­wide, in­equal­i­ty and per­sis­tent health crises.

That in­cludes Turkey’s push­back to Fin­land and Swe­den ap­ply­ing for NA­TO mem­ber­ship. Finnish For­eign Min­is­ter Pekka Haav­is­to said at Davos that a del­e­ga­tion from his coun­try and Swe­den will trav­el to the Turk­ish cap­i­tal Wednes­day for talks.

Both Haav­is­to and NA­TO Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al Jens Stoltenberg said in sep­a­rate com­ments at the gath­er­ing that they be­lieve they can over­come Turkey’s con­cerns about what it sees as Fin­land’s and Swe­den’s sup­port for groups it con­sid­ers ter­ror­ists.

“We have to do what we al­ways do in NA­TO, and that is to sit down and ad­dress con­cerns when al­lies ex­press con­cerns,” Stoltenberg said.

But even in dis­cus­sions of those is­sues, cli­mate change was of­ten ever present, as was the ten­sion over what role oil and gas com­pa­nies may play in a tran­si­tion to green en­er­gy.

On Mon­day and again on Tues­day, the head of the In­ter­na­tion­al En­er­gy Agency, Fatih Birol, said the ur­gent en­er­gy needs of the mo­ment should not turn in­to an ex­cuse to make long-term in­vest­ments in fos­sil fu­el ex­plo­ration and ex­trac­tion, which has spiked in re­cent months.

In­stead, Birol ar­gued the em­pha­sis need­ed to be a fast shift to re­new­able en­er­gies, an in­crease in nu­clear where pos­si­ble, stop­ping leaks of methane, one of the most pow­er­ful green­house gas­es, and low­er­ing per­son­al con­sump­tion, like turn­ing down the ther­mo­stat a few de­grees.

“Some peo­ple may use the in­va­sion of Ukraine as an ex­cuse for fos­sil fu­el in­vest­ments. That will for­ev­er close the door to reach our cli­mate tar­gets” to re­duce emis­sions that are heat­ing up the plan­et, he said.

Vic­ki Hol­lub, CEO of Oc­ci­den­tal Pe­tro­le­um a ma­jor oil com­pa­ny, coun­tered that oil and gas in­dus­tries had a cen­tral role to play in the tran­si­tion to re­new­able en­er­gy.

In­stead of talk about mov­ing away from fos­sil fu­els, Hol­lub said the fo­cus should be on mak­ing fos­sil fu­els clean­er by re­duc­ing emis­sions. She said Oc­ci­den­tal had in­vest­ed heav­i­ly in wind and so­lar en­er­gy and planned to build the largest di­rect air cap­ture fa­cil­i­ty in the world in the Per­mi­an Basin. Di­rect air cap­ture is a process that pulls car­bon diox­ide out of the air and buries it deep in the ground.

“The U.S. can pro­vide am­ple re­sources to the rest of the world. How­ev­er, it’s be­com­ing more and more dif­fi­cult to do that be­cause of the fact that we are get­ting a lot of head­winds,” she said on Mon­day. “One is the be­lief that we can end the use of oil and gas soon­er rather than lat­er.”

Joe Manchin, a U.S. sen­a­tor from West Vir­ginia who has op­posed a ma­jor bill on cli­mate change pro­posed by Pres­i­dent Joe Biden, said Mon­day that fos­sil fu­els were key to en­sure en­er­gy se­cu­ri­ty, and Amer­i­ca had the re­sources to help en­sure such se­cu­ri­ty for the world.

“We can’t do it by aban­don­ing the fos­sil fu­el in­dus­try,” said Manchin, a De­mo­c­rat, adding that no tran­si­tion could take place un­til al­ter­na­tives were ful­ly in place.

Many en­er­gy ex­perts ar­gue that vi­able al­ter­na­tives are al­ready in place. For ex­am­ple, the cost of wind and so­lar have come down con­sid­er­ably in re­cent decades while ef­fi­cien­cies of both have dra­mat­i­cal­ly in­creased. At the same time, oth­er more nascent tech­nolo­gies have promise but need mas­sive in­vest­ment to de­vel­op.

___

Pe­ter Prenga­man is The As­so­ci­at­ed Press’ glob­al cli­mate and en­vi­ron­ment news di­rec­tor.

As­so­ci­at­ed Press jour­nal­ists Kelvin Chan and Jamey Keat­en in Davos and Dana Belta­ji in Lon­don and Samuel Pe­tre­quin in Brus­sels con­tributed to this re­port.

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