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Climate Plans Falter as Big Oil Chases Near-Term Profits
The Straits Times
|December 28, 2024
European Oil Majors' Commitment to Renewables Set for Back Seat Again in 2025
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LONDON — Major European energy companies doubled down on oil and gas in 2024 to focus on near-term profits, slowing down — and at times reversing — climate commitments in a shift that they are likely to stick with in 2025.
The rollback by oil majors comes after governments around the world slowed the rollout of clean energy policies and delayed targets as energy costs soared following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Big European energy companies that had invested heavily in the clean energy transition found their share performance lagging US rivals Exxon and Chevron, which had kept their focus on oil and gas.
Against this backdrop, the likes of BP and Shell in 2024 sharply slowed their plans to spend billions on wind and solar power projects and shifted spending to higher-margin oil and gas projects.
BP, which had aimed for a twentyfold growth in renewable power this decade to 50 gigawatts, announced in December that it would spin off almost all its offshore wind projects into a joint venture with Japanese power generator Jera.
Shell, which once pledged to become the world's largest electricity company, largely stopped investments in new offshore wind projects, exited power markets in Europe and China, and weakened carbon reduction targets.
Norway's state-controlled Equinor also slowed spending on renewables.
This story is from the December 28, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.
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