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Political Climate Shifting Against The Oil And
Gas Industry
By Nick Cunningham
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 11, 2015
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Oil and gas companies have had a tough time over the past year trying
to weather the storm of falling oil prices. But the political and
financial winds are moving in the wrong direction for the industry,
raising more "above ground" problems at a time that they can ill-afford
it.
Drilling oil and gas wells requires a lot of money. For
companies that have seen their revenues vanish because of collapsing oil
prices, access to credit is obviously critically important. But U.S.
financial regulators are growing concerned about a pile of energy debt
that is deteriorating in quality. A
report from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve singled out the
oil and gas sector when it concluded that credit risk was rising across
the United States.
For example, there is at least $34.2 billion in
loans in the banking sector that have a credit rating suggesting they are
"substandard," "doubtful," or "loss." That figure is up from just $6.9
billion in 2014. Put another way, about 12 percent of all loans to oil and
gas companies are rated "substandard" or worse.
Low oil prices are
undermining the ability of some companies to pay back their debt. However,
increased oversight from banking regulators could force banks to take
corrective measures, which could mean reducing their exposure to high-risk
energy debt. Such a development does not bode well for oil and gas
drillers. Tighter credit conditions – which could also be impacted by a
pending rate increase by the Federal Reserve in December – will make
drilling more expensive.
In the political arena, things are not
any better, with last week being a particularly rough one for the energy
sector.
First, the attorney general in New York announced an
investigation into ExxonMobil, for what it sees as evidence that the
company lied about the dangers of climate change. The probe comes on the
heels of
reports from InsideClimate News that the oil major's own scientists
knew about the threat of climate change decades ago. But, according to the
report, ExxonMobil buried the science and instead began funding think
tanks and scientific research to sow doubt about climate change.
Critics of ExxonMobil have called for an investigation by the U.S. Justice
Department, a chorus that includes three democratic presidential
candidates and a growing number of members of Congress. But the NY
attorney general investigation has taken the scandal to a new level. Att.
General Eric T. Schneiderman subpoenaed financial records, emails and
other documents from the Texas-based oil major. The investigation, as
The New York Times put it, "focuses on whether statements the company
made to investors about climate risks as recently as this year were
consistent with the company's own long-running scientific research."
ExxonMobil confirmed receipt of the subpoena and was still forming a
response on November 4. But Kenneth Cohen, vice president for public
affairs at ExxonMobil, denied the allegations. "We unequivocally reject
the allegations that Exxon Mobil has suppressed climate change research,"
he said.
Finally, President Obama rejected the Keystone XL
pipeline on November 6, which will only come as news to readers living
under a rock. The immediate reaction is to look at the effect on oil
markets; analysis that has been beaten to death over the past seven years.
Still, as of the fourth quarter of 2015, there's good reason to think that
the rejection hurts oil sands producers because of
limited pipeline capacity. Even Keystone XL's proponents agree. Joe
Oliver, the former Canadian minister of natural resources and minister of
finance under Prime Minister Stephen Harper,
wrote in the Financial Post about the urgent need for new pipelines.
He says that Canadian oil producers would lose $100 billion over the next
15 years if no new pipelines are built. The business atmosphere is likely
to get much tougher for Canadian oil now that a new government has
promised a more rigorous environmental review for pipelines.
But
the political fallout from Keystone XL is probably more significant than
the immediate effect on oil markets. The project was rejected because of
its impact on greenhouse gas emissions, a potential precedent for climate
change action. The world may look back on this point as the first in a
series of moves in which fossil fuel projects must climb an ever steeper
political hill in terms of gaining approval. As alternative energy
projects become cheaper and cheaper, the political establishment is
finding that taking on the energy industry is not as intimidating as it
once was.
Bloomberg published a
pretty glaring chart that sums up how the industry has for years
overestimated its long-term prospects. Based on last week's developments,
which included the launch of an investigation into the world's largest oil
company and the rejection of the most politicized energy project to date,
the "above ground" problems for the energy industry are growing much
worse. That could complicate the future fortunes of oil and gas companies.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Political-Climate-Shifting-Against-The-Oil-And-Gas-Industry.html
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