The US Energy Secretary blasted renewable-fuel champions on Wednesday, while the head of Royal Dutch Shell urged the energy sector to focus on world efforts to cut carbon emissions, revealing a yawning trans-Atlantic gap on climate issues.
Speaking at the CERAWeek conference hosted by IHS Markit in Houston, Shell chief executive officer Ben van Beurden outlined an ambitious plan to reduce the Anglo-Dutch company’s carbon footprint and expand in renewables, and called on others to follow.
“The energy landscape is changing fast. So we must change, where change is what the world needs,” Van Beurden said.
He spoke after US Secretary of Energy Rick Perry struck a starkly different tone, blasting the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement to limit global warming.
Perry said it was “immoral” to say that people should live without fossil fuels.
“We are passionate about renewable energy, but the world, especially developing economies, will continue to need fossil fuels, as over a billion people on the planet live without access to electricity,” Perry said.
The US, under former US president Barack Obama, helped negotiate the Paris Agreement, which calls for a gradual shift to renewable energy by the end of the century.
US President Donald Trump decided to withdraw last year.
Van Beurden gave an unusually strongly worded speech calling climate the biggest challenge facing the energy sector.
“There may not be total unity behind the Paris Agreement any longer, but there is no other issue with the potential to disrupt our industry on such a deep and fundamental level,” he said.
Perry extolled growing US energy independence, as a boom in onshore shale drilling led to a rapid growth in oil as well as natural gas, the least polluting fossil fuel.
The rise of gas at the expense of dirtier coal helped the world’s biggest economy sharply reduce its carbon emissions over the past decade, as gas displaced much domestic coal demand.
“The lesson is clear [that] we don’t have to choose between growing our economy and caring for our environment, by embracing innovation over regulation we can benefit from both,” Perry said.
Shell and European peers, including BP, France’s Total and Norway’s Statoil, are becoming increasingly active in low-carbon energy and are vocal supporters of the Paris Agreement. Until recently, climate has been less prominent in strategy presentations from US rivals Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp.
Executives at the Houston conference repeatedly noted growing demand for fossil fuels and downplayed the overall viability of renewable energy or electric vehicles, noting emissions would continue to rise even if there was 100 percent adoption of electronic vehicles.
On Wednesday, General Motors chief executive officer Mary Barra said the company’s “commitment to an all-electric, zero-emissions future is unwavering, regardless of any modifications to future fuel economy standards.”
Other executives spoke of moving to carbon capture technologies and carbon taxes.
BP president Robert Dudley on Tuesday said that “at some point in the future a price on carbon has to be part of this answer.”
The projected growth of oil demand is “definitely not in line with the Paris climate goals,” International Energy Agency Executive Director Fatih Birol said, adding that the industry must start using carbon capture sequestration (CCS) technologies.
In New York on Wednesday, Exxon Mobil chief executive officer Darren Woods echoed Perry’s words at the company’s investor day, noting developing nations need solutions to generate more electricity.
Like others, Woods said Exxon advocates a carbon tax to limit emissions.
“By and large, we don’t see enough incentives to grow CCS in the marketplace,” Exxon manager of environmental policy and planning Peter Trelenberg said
Few in Houston were as emphatic as Van Beurden, who outlined how Shell is moving to meet its targets to halve carbon emissions by 2050.
Steps include limiting emissions from operations and boosting natural gas production to reach 75 percent of company oil and gas output.
“Over time, this net carbon footprint ambition will transform our company’s product mix,” Van Beurden said.
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