Key Resources
Looking for more information? Here’s everything you should need.
Press Release
Oil majors are gambling on emissions mitigation technologies
Companies’ climate policies seek to create space for investment in new production. LONDON/NEW YORK, 12...
Read MoreWebinar
Absolute Impact: How do we know if oil and gas ‘net zero’ ambitions are credible?
Oil and gas companies are starting to recognise the impact that the energy transition will have on their core...
Read MoreKey Quotes
Mike Coffin, Carbon Tracker Head of Oil, Gas and Mining and report author, said: “Financial institutions must scrutinise companies’ emissions targets and whether their plans to achieve them are practical and credible in order to assess alignment with global climate goals. This is particularly so for companies which seek to “create space” for further fossil investment. The best way for companies to reduce both their climate impact and transition risk exposure for investors is to allow their existing production to decline without investing in new assets.”
Maeve O’Connor, Carbon Tracker Analyst and report author, said: “Oil and gas companies are gambling on emissions mitigation technologies that pose a huge risk to both investors and the climate. Most of these technologies are still at an early stage of development, with few large projects working at anything like the scale required by company goals, while solutions that involve tree planting require huge areas of land. It remains to be seen whether these technologies will be technically feasible or economically viable given the huge costs involved.”
Oil and gas companies are still failing to commit to the absolute emissions reductions necessary to link their businesses to the finite limits of the carbon budget.
For the third year running Carbon Tracker’s Absolute Impact report assesses and ranks climate policies, expanding its analysis to cover the 15 largest publicly traded oil and gas companies. It warns that net zero targets are not enough for companies to be aligned with Paris – they need absolute limits on future emissions and significant interim targets.
A key element of this year’s analysis is a greater focus on the credibility of companies’ approaches to emissions reductions and the degree to which their efforts contribute to a genuine fall in global emissions levels.
Since the first publication of this report in 2020, there are now many more “net zero” goals. However, not all company targets, or ambitions, are created equal in the degree to which they reduce the impact of company activities on global temperature rise.
Key Findings
- Net zero goals alone are insufficient to reduce carbon emissions in line with Paris goals and curb corporate transition risk.
- We provide a relative ranking of the emission reduction targets of 15 of the largest listed oil and gas companies based on our “Hallmarks of Paris Compliance” (majors plus Equinor, Occidental, Repsol, Devon, EOG Resources, EQT, Suncor, and Pioneer).
- Tier one includes those with absolute reduction targets including Scope 3 emissions
- Tier 2 companies are those with scope 3 emissions reductions on an intensity-only basis.
- Tier 3 includes companies with only operational intensity (Scope 1 & 2) emissions reduction goals.
- Setting appropriate targets is just the first step; the approach to achieving emissions reductions must be credible to ensure that both stated reductions occur and that shareholders’ exposure to transition risks are not increased.
- Asset divestments must not be used to justify continued investment in new fossil assets.
- The ability of emissions mitigation technologies such as CCUS and “nature-based solutions” to deliver stated reductions must be scrutinised.
- 3rd Party offsets may not actually lead to emissions reductions.
- Winding-down existing assets is the best way to reduce both the climate impact of company activities and transition risk for investors.
- To support investors’ engagement with companies we define a set of “Credibility Criteria” to assess company plans to reduce emissions