Site icon Conservation news

The best of the worst: fossil-fuel extractors pave the way for the low-carbon revolution

At the end of last year, the world got some good news on the green business front concerning a very unlikely set of participants. A recent market review revealed that Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips, Royal Dutch Shell, Duke Energy, PG&E Corporation, American Electric Power Company, ConAgra Foods and Walmart, among others, are including shadow carbon prices in their forecasts.



This indicates that these hugely-profitable multinational corporations expect that carbon emissions will have a price put on its head soon. Carbon dioxide is the most common greenhouse gas, and consequently, has the largest effect on global warming. And the higher carbon is priced, the more likely companies will be to control and reduce their emissions. So, the more companies find financial reasons to curb their carbon emissions, the lower their global warming impact will be.



But does the grouping above sound familiar? It should. These companies represent some of the most controversial industries in American history. Dominating the oil, gas, electric generation, agriculture and retail industries, each of these behemoths wield unfathomable influence over markets and politics. So, by being financially prepared to fork over large sums of money in order to emit carbon, their influence may have positive consequences.





Wind farm in the Dominican Republic. Photo by: Tiffany Roufs.

Wind farm in the Dominican Republic. Photo by: Tiffany Roufs.

Carbon can be priced through cap-and-trade credits or carbon taxes. Carbon credits represent one ton of carbon dioxide emissions and are traded in a commodities market similar to grains, cotton or metals. If the limit or cap on carbon emissions is ever-decreasing, then carbon emissions will not only be statically expensive, but increasingly expensive. Carbon-emitting companies will be subjected to ever higher costs, forcing them to find alternative, more environmentally-friendly and cheaper business practices to please shareholders aiming at cost control.



On the other hand, carbon taxes place a cost premium directly on usage. This means, carbon dioxide emitting companies will be encouraged to lower emissions as they pay more for each ton of carbon emitted. Carbon taxes may not, however, limit the quantity of emissions, much as an exorbitant tax on any good will not force a cap. They are also much more difficult to increase over time—taxes are never popular. Though because all nations already tax companies, this route requires very little infrastructural change in comparison to cap-and-trade. However, either method is better than neither and may prove effective at reducing emissions, which continue to rise globally.



Whichever of the two formats these companies employ, they are all actively projecting the integration of what economists call externalities into their financial costs. The major negative externality of fossil fuels is global warming. By pricing it through either cap-and-trade or taxation, some of that damage is being valued at its real, destructive and harmful cost.



This trend signals a real expectation that carbon emissions will be priced to reflect its true cost to our planet’s climatic stability. As participants in the largest carbon emitting industries, the above companies are acknowledging their own historical impacts on the carbon equation. Oil, gas and electric generation account for almost all of the emissions to blame for current, unprecedented global warming. These industries release matter which has been subterraneously sequestered slowly throughout geologic history—a very slow-motion version of the scene in Ghostbusters when the EPA official releases ghosts which had been stored up over time.



Fossil fuel industries also power the global economy, and are single-handedly responsible for the increase in productivity which has afforded at least a portion of humanity its current, rather cushy, standard of living. Because global agricultural and pharmaceutical output is currently dependent on the release of carbon-based energies, halting it completely today would cause a massive loss of life which most would judge as unconscionable. However, quickly—but not immediately—curbing the global addiction to fossil-fueled power will force economic innovation in the search for alternative ways to create power.



As the largest emitters, these companies have the most to lose or gain from projected regulatory changes. If they innovate cheap ways of cutting carbon emissions, then they can sell excess carbon credits to companies who fall short. Those who fall behind the pack will find it increasingly difficult to please investors and will fold. It is evolution of the fittest, leanest business model—and in this rare case, the most environmentally-friendly.



However, the implementation of carbon pricing schemes, itself, is the most complicated factor. Whether there is sufficient political will at the national, much less international, level is uncertain. While companies including carbon costs on their financial statements does prove the expectation that such pricing will have a significant effect, it does not necessarily indicate the catalyst needed at a legislative level.



Recorded global temperature rise from 1880-2012. Graph courtesy of NASA.
Recorded global temperature rise from 1880-2012. Graph courtesy of NASA.



California is out of the gate using carbon credits and 22 other states are trying their hand at various shades of carbon pricing programs. Each one is an experiment at the state level. At the macro level is the Kyoto Protocol, the largely ineffective accord designed to facilitate the international sale of carbon credits. Europe has shown promise under the Protocol, but has yet to effectively link up with the world market. Australia even revoked its legislative framework for carbon credit marketing and will attempt to limit carbon emissions through other means.



As an under-developed market still in the beta test phase, the outcomes of carbon pricing and carbon credits is anyone’s guess. This uncertainty is reflected in the variation of estimates that these companies are using, which range from $5 to $60. Nations, international organizations and companies alike are attempting to integrate their expectations into business models the best they can.



Because the companies above have so much at stake over the issue, it should be no surprise they are front runners in including carbon prices in their forecasts. Those who weather the storm and still turn a profit will pave the way for industries further down the carbon ladder. Fossil fuel production is the core source of energy which powers daily life. As nearly all other industries depend on those companies, they too will eventually make the requisite adjustments, incorporating carbon prices as any other commodity in their production process. The trials and tribulations that these companies face will set the stage to accommodate a more realistic cost for carbon.



While it is doubtful that any of the companies mentioned are happy about the proposed obstacles, it is apparent that they are preparing for them. They have put together the tinder for a bonfire of environmentally-friendly business practices, even though cohesive legislation has yet to be developed to light it. However, the true cost of carbon emissions and consequent global warming is becoming more apparent. When even extractive industries, themselves, prepare for that cost to be integrated as just another cost of doing business, the change may well be institutionalized.







Related articles


Ocean acidifying 10 times faster than anytime in the last 55 million years, putting polar ecosystems at risk

(02/24/2014) An assessment of ocean acidification, presented at the UN Climate Change Conference in Warsaw in November 2013, starkly concluded that acidity is on track to rise 170 percent by the end of this century. As many key species are sensitive to changes in acidity, this would drastically impact ocean ecosystems, with effects especially pronounced in polar regions where the cold waters intensify acidification, and which are home to many organisms that are particularly vulnerable to acidification.

2013 was the seventh hottest year yet

(01/27/2014) Global warming continues apace as 2013 was the seventh warmest year in the past 133 years, according to a new analysis from NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS). In total, the global temperature in 2013 averaged 14.6 degrees Celsius (58.3 degrees Fahrenheit), or 0.6 degrees Celsius (1.1 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter than the 20th Century average.

Underestimating global warming: gaps in Arctic temperature data lead scientists and public astray

(01/15/2014) No place on Earth is heating up faster than the Arctic, but just how fast has remained an open question due to large gaps in temperature data across the vast region. Now, a recent study in the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society finds that not only is the Arctic warming eight times faster than the rest of the planet, but failure to account for temperature gaps has led global datasets to underestimate the rise of temperatures worldwide.

Carbon emissions rise 2 percent in U.S. due to increase in coal

(01/14/2014) Carbon dioxide emissions rose two percent in the U.S. last year, according to preliminary data from the Energy Information Administration. Emissions rose largely due to increased coal consumption, the first such rise in U.S. emissions since 2010. Still, the annual emissions remain well below the peak hit in 2007 when emissions hit 6 billion tons.

Climate fail: Geoengineering would cool planet, but screw up rainfall patterns

(01/14/2014) For decades, scientists have been grappling with the consequences of climate change and working toward viable solutions. Climate engineering, also known as geoengineering, is the most controversial possible solution. Currently, one of the most talked about geoengineering ideas is Solar Radiation Management (SRM), which intends to block shortwave solar radiation, thus cooling the Earth to offset rising temperatures. In other words, SRM may be one way in which global temperatures could be artificially stabilized.

Down Under scorching: Australia experiences warmest year on record

(01/06/2014) Australia had its warmest year on record, with annual temperatures 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.16 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1961-1990 average, according to a new analysis from Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology (BOM). This is 0.5 degrees Celsius higher than the previous warmest year on record—2005—for Australia. Global warming due to burning fossil fuels is increasing temperatures worldwide.

Global warming could upset Antarctic food chain

(01/02/2014) Resting near the bottom of the foodchain, Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) underpin much of the Southern Ocean’s ecosystem. But in a rapidly warming world, these hugely-abundant crustaceans could see their habitat shrink considerably. In a recent paper in PLOS ONE, scientists predict that Antarctic krill could lose 20 percent of their growth habitat, or 1.2 million square kilometers.

Climate change drives Florida mangroves northward

(12/30/2013) A decline in the frequency of extreme cold weather in Florida has allowed coastal mangrove forests to expand northward, finds a study published this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Exit mobile version