Month: December 2019

Outgoing BP CEO: fossil fuels essential for decades

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Philip Bratby

 

 

Just to confirm what I was saying about Mark Carney’s latest intervention, Bob Dudley reminds us just why BP won’t be shutting up shop for a while yet:

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BP’s outgoing CEO, Bob Dudley, has accused activists and politicians of oversimplifying energy issues, saying that fossil fuels will remain essential for at least two more decades.

He said some of his daughter’s friends were taking antidepressants because of climate fears.

Dudley said he hated “to see young people so unhappy, so anxious” and his daughter, a social worker in California, questioned his career choices…

BP says, at the current rate of change, oil, gas and coal would still account for 73 per cent of energy consumed by 2040. Even under a “rapid transition” envisioned under the 2015 Paris climate agreement, fossil fuels would account for an estimated 56 per cent, the oil and gas giant forecast.

BP has invested in biofuels and solar power but has faced criticism for channelling only 3 per cent of its annual spending budget into renewable sources.

Dudley, who is to step down as chief executive in February, said: “There will be 2 billion more people, roughly, on the planet by 2040 and we’ll need a third more energy, which is like saying we’re going to need another China and US in terms of scale. Today, renewables are 4 per cent of primary demand around the world. People have simplified this incredibly complex thing far too much. There’s a lot of people who just think, ‘Stop using fossil fuels and put renewables everywhere.’ You will not even come close to that.

The 64-year-old said: “The epicentre of climate change, really, is there’s a coal-fired power plant starting up every week in eight countries in Asia, so the perspective here and in the US is completely different to in Asia because they need to raise living standards for a large, growing population . . . I believe the world cannot have any chance of reaching the goals of Paris without natural gas displacing coal. Natural gas is a potent greenhouse gas, but if it doesn’t leak and you burn it right, it has half the carbon dioxide emissions of coal.”

https://www.energy-reporters.com/industry/outgoing-bp-ceo-fossil-fuels-essential-for-decades/

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December 31, 2019 at 12:06PM

Climate Alarmist Banks Go Carbon-Colonialist

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If the false ideology of a ‘carbon road block’ by big finance hits Africans looking for ways to improve their national economies and living standards, expect China to move in even more than it has done already.

PA Pundits – International

By Paul Driessen and David Wojick, Ph.D. ~

Africa has the world’s lowest electrification rate. Its power consumption per capita is just 613 kilowatt-hours per year, compared to 6,500 kWh in Europe and 13,000 in the United States, African Development Bank (AfDB) President Akinwumi Adesina observed in July 2017. That’s 9.4% of EU and 4.7% of US electricity consumption. It’s equivalent to Americans having electricity only 1 hour a day, 8 hours a week, 411 hours per year – at totally unpredictable times, for a few minutes, hours or days at a stretch.

It’s actually even worse than that. Excluding significantly electrified South Africa, sub-Sahara Africans consume an almost irrelevant 181 kWh of electricity per capita – 1.4% of the average American’s!

In Sub-Saharan Africa, over 600 million people have no electricity, and over 700 million rely on wood, grass and dung for cooking and heating. The region is home…

View original post 1,340 more words

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December 31, 2019 at 12:04PM

Does Mark Carney Understand How Financial Markets Work?

By Paul Homewood

 

 

Yesterday I mentioned Mark Carney’s latest call for the financial sector to divest from fossil fuels:

 

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Mark Carney has claimed the pension fund investments held by millions of people could become “worthless” unless the financial sector reacts quicker to the climate change crisis.

Financial firms are starting to curb investment in fossil fuels but are “not moving fast enough,” the Bank of England governor will say in an interview for an edition of the BBC Today programme edited by Greta Thunberg, the teenage environmental campaigner.

The Bank of England claims up to £16 trillion of assets could be wiped out if the climate emergency is not addressed effectively including by banks and pension funds over-exposed to “sunset” fossil fuel industries…

Pressed on whether pension funds should divest from fossil fuels even if the returns are attractive, Mr Carney said: "Well that hasn’t been the case but they could make that argument.

"They need to make the argument, to be clear about why is that going to be the case if a substantial proportion of those assets are going to be worthless."

He added: “The judgement of some leading pension funds is that if you add up the policies of all of the companies out there, they are consistent with warming of 3.7-3.8 degrees. That is far above the 1.5 degrees that the people say they want and governments are demanding.”

The Governor who steps down in the New Year to be the UN’s special envoy for climate action and finance, warned that unless firms woke up to the “climate crisis,” their assets would be worthless.

“If we were to burn all those oil and gases there’s no way we would meet carbon budget,” he said. “Up to 80 per cent of coal assets will be stranded, (and) up to half of developed oil reserves.”

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/12/29/pension-fund-investments-held-millions-could-rendered-worthless/

 

Not only does this show a naivety about the politics of climate. Perhaps even more alarming, given the fact he has been in charge of the Bank of England for umpteen years, is that it shows a complete lack of understanding of how financial markets work.

So, to re-cap:

Carney argues that investments in fossil fuels, such as oil and mining companies, could eventually be worthless, as their assets will be “stranded”.

However, the market normally values shares not on the perceived asset value in decades time, but on discounted future returns, ie dividends. Because they are discounted, potential dividends in the near future are worth considerably more than those, say, in twenty years time. Put another way, BP could go bust in 2050, but it would make next to no difference to its market value now.

(There are exceptions to this, notably where investors buy into loss making companies, in the hope they will become successful and profitable in future. However, this is a huge gamble).

To see how the numbers work out, let’s look at BP’s accounts:

Currently BP’s market capitalisation is £95bn  – 20.2m shares at £4.70 per share.

According to their 2018 Annual Accounts, post tax profit came to $9.4bn, or £7.2bn.

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https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/investors/results-and-reporting/annual-report/annual-reporting-archive.html 

 

So in simple terms, if you bought a share in BP today, you would get all of the money back in 13 and a bit years, assuming profits are maintained at this same level. Of course, you would need to discount these numbers, as you could have invested it somewhere else and earned interest as well as getting your money back.

Nevertheless though, you can see that BP is a worthwhile investment, assuming returns can be maintained over a period of maybe about 20 years. And let us be absolutely clear here, regardless of Carney’s scaremongering, fossil fuels will still be in global demand for many years to come.

In fact though, an investment in BP is even more attractive than my figures indicate, because free cashflow is much greater than profits. Last year, operating cashflow was $22.9bn, more than double profits. This is because that figure does not include capital expenditure, roughly $16bn in 2018, which makes up such a sizeable proportion of the oil industry’s costs.

If Carney is really right, and the world stops using oil and gas in the next decade or so, what will BP and other oil majors do? Very simply, they will do exactly what they do every time there is a market slump.

That is, they will cut back on new capital expenditure, possibly to nothing. The money they would have spent on drilling new oil fields will instead go to enhance dividends or fund share buy backs.

In the event that Carney is right then, investors can expect to recover their capital in four years. As I say, this is a common practice when demand for oil is low, and oil prices tank. To make things even more attractive for investors, BP holds $26bn in cash and cash equivalents in its balance sheet, covering more than a quarter of current market value.

 

As I say, I find it frightening that the Governor of the Bank of England does not appear to understand this very basic market mechanism. Or maybe he does, but would rather scaremonger for political reasons.

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December 31, 2019 at 12:00PM

Happy New Year! Happy New Tax!

Contributed by Robert Lyman 2019. Lyman’s bio can be read here.

As Canadians celebrate the beginning of 2020, their happiness at starting a new year will be dulled somewhat by … Continue reading

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December 31, 2019 at 11:21AM