"Policy makers must realise that their instincts to
completely use the fossil fuels within their countries are wholly incompatible
with their commitments to the 2C goal." said lead researcher Dr Christophe
McGlade, of the UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources. Currently, the world
is heading for a catastrophic 5C of warming and the deadline to seal a global
climate deal comes in December at a crunch UN summit in Paris.
The Middle East would need to leave about 40% of its oil and
60% of its gas underground. The majority of the huge coal reserves in China, India,
Russia and the United States would have to remain unused. Undeveloped resources
of unconventional gas, such as shale gas, would be off limits in Africa and the
Middle East, and very little could be exploited in India and China. Unconventional
oil, such as Canada's tar sands, would be unviable.
The research also raises questions for fossil fuel companies
about investment in future exploration. "We shouldn't waste a lot of money
trying to find fossil fuels which we think are going to be more
expensive," co-researcher Prof Paul Ekins told the BBC. "That almost
certainly includes Arctic resources. It will certainly include a lot of the
shale gas resources in Europe, which have not really been explored or exploited
at all."
Rob Bailey, research director for energy, environment and
resources at Chatham House, said the finding that half of natural gas reserves
must remain untapped will make uncomfortable reading for governments seeking to
replicate the US shale revolution and displace dirtier coal. "The recently
heralded golden age of gas will be short lived if we are to avoid dangerous
climate change," he said.
Emma Pinchbeck, WWF-UK's head of energy and climate change
policy, said the study showed "yet apocalypticagain that the majority of the world's
fossil fuel reserves, and coal in particular, must stay in the ground to stay
within two degrees of warming".
The new study reveals the profound geopolitical and economic
implications of tackling global warming for both countries and major companies
that are reliant on fossil fuel wealth. It shows trillions of dollars of known
and extractable coal, oil and gas cannot be exploited. Major fossil fuel
companies face the risk that significant parts of their reserves will become
worthless, with Anglo American, BHP Billiton and Exxaro owning huge coal
reserves and Lukoil, Exxon Mobil, BP, Gazprom and Chevron owning massive oil
and gas reserves. Exxon alone spends $100m A DAY on exploration.
Financial experts, including the Bank of England and Goldman
Sachs, have begun taking seriously the risk that expensive fossil fuel projects
will be rendered worthless by future climate action. James Leaton, research
director at the Carbon Tracker Initiative (CTI) said: “Investors are already
using the detailed CTI cost curves to start identifying how low demand and
price scenarios could play out.”
The research also highlights the contradiction of
governments seeking to maximise their nation’s fossil fuel extraction, as in
the UK, while simultaneously pledging to limit global warming to 2C. Michael
Jakob, a climate change economist at the Mercator Research Institute on Global
Commons and Climate Change in Berlin. “If you really want to convince
developing countries to leave their coal in the ground, you have to offer
something else and I don’t think the Saudis will leave that oil in the ground
if they get nothing for it,” he said, citing green technology including CCS, as
well as financial compensation. Jakob said the challenge was enormous, but that
it provided benefits as well as costs: “There are huge sums at stake, but not
just on the losers’ side but also on the winners’ side. Some assets will lose
value, but others will gain value, like solar and wind power and land for
biomass production.”
The new analysis calls into question the gigantic sums of
private and government investment being ploughed into exploration for new fossil
fuel reserves, according to UCL’s Professor Paul Ekins, who conducted the
research with McGlade. “In 2013, fossil fuel companies spent some $670bn
(£443bn) on exploring for new oil and gas resources. One might ask why they are
doing this when there is more in the ground than we can afford to burn,” he
said. “The investors in those companies might feel that money is better spent
either developing low-carbon energy sources or being returned to investors as
dividends,” said Ekins.
“One lesson of this work is unmistakably obvious: when
you’re in a hole, stop digging,” said Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org
which is campaigning to get investors to dump their fossil fuel stocks. “These
numbers show that unconventional and ‘extreme’ fossil fuel – Canada’s tar sands,
for instance – simply have to stay in the ground. Given these numbers, it makes
literally no sense for the industry to go hunting for more fossil fuel,”
McKibben said. “We’ve binged to the edge of our own destruction. The last thing
we need now is to find a few more liquor stores to loot.”
The only sensible response to such findings is a global
agreement to leave these unburnable fossil fuels in the ground. But it’s not
just that no such agreement exists, no such agreement has ever been mooted. There
has not been a single proposal, debate or even position paper on limiting
fossil fuel production put forward during international climate negotiations. Almost
all nations pay lip service to the idea of minimising greenhouse gas emissions
yet all if the stuff keeps coming out of the ground, it will be burnt, without
regard to the feeble policies seeking to limit its consumption. For years,
governments have been wasting precious time by pursuing unworkable solutions.
Despite the validity of the science and the sincerity of those reformers, to
expect that capitalism will no longer support the goose that lays their golden
eggs is far, far more an utopian expectation than the supposed unachievable hope
of the socialist solution to the problem. Capitalists would rather see the
planet burn than give up the chance to make money. The energy companies
manipulate the media and feed uncertainty around the impact of CO2 on global
warming. Any real action is at best delayed and at worst completely shelved
while their paid for politicians play Russian roulette with the lives of all of
humanity.
Capitalism offers us two choices: cataclysmic bad or apocalyptic bad.
Only socialism can fully ascribe and abide with the Great Law
of the Iroquois:
“In all of your deliberations in the Confederate Council, in
your efforts at law making, in all your official acts, self-interest shall be
cast into oblivion. Cast not over your shoulder behind you the warnings of the
nephews and nieces should they chide you for any error or wrong you may do, but
return to the way of the Great Law which is just and right. Look and listen for
the welfare of the whole people and have always in view not only the present
but also the coming generations, even those whose faces are yet beneath the
surface of the ground – the unborn of the future Nation.”
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