BP chief executive Bernard Looney speaks in Cairo, Egypt, on Feb. 14, 2022.AMR ABDALLAH DALSH/Reuters
BP chief executive Bernard Looney says he will not further scale back his energy transition strategy after ceding some ground earlier this year, despite investors penalizing the group over its plan to break away from rivals in cutting oil and gas output.
Taking office in February, 2020, with a vow to reinvent the 114-year-old company, Mr. Looney laid out ambitious plans for the British energy giant to achieve zero net emissions by 2050, and to invest billions in renewable and low-carbon power.
Since then he has navigated the group through some of the most tumultuous years in modern history, from COVID-19 to a rapid exit from Russia following the invasion of Ukraine last year, an energy price shock, and a global cost of living crisis.
Earlier this year BP BP-N scaled down plans to cut hydrocarbon production by 2030, to 25 per cent from 2019 levels from 40 per cent previously.
However, it remains the only major oil company aiming to reduce output by the end of the decade. Rival Shell SHEL-N plans to maintain oil production and grow its gas output by 2030, while TotalEnergies TTE-N also aims to grow output.
Investors have responded coolly to the transition plan. BP’s shares have risen around 4 per cent since Mr. Looney took office, against gains of around 20 per cent and 29 per cent for European counterparts Shell and TotalEnergies, and increases of 50 per cent and 80 per cent for U.S. rivals Chevron CVX-N and Exxon Mobil XOM-N.
Oil and gas remain BP’s main source of revenue by a large margin, helping lift the company’s profits to a record $28-billion in 2022.
But Mr. Looney said he won’t be slowing its shift away from hydrocarbons any further.
“We’re holding our nerve on the transition,” the 53-year-old Irishman said in an interview with Reuters in his office at BP’s headquarters in central London.
“I believe that’s what the world needs. And I believe it’s our job to prove that is in the long-term interests of our shareholders.”
While governments around the world have encouraged companies to boost oil and gas output in the wake of the Ukraine war, with some slowing their own decarbonization plans as energy bills soared, Mr. Looney portrays the oil sector as a sunset industry.
The rapid growth in electric-vehicle (EV) markets is a case in point, he said.
“When it comes to private transport, for us, that game is over – it’s EVs,” Mr. Looney said. “That revolution is happening.”
BP plans to invest US$55-billion to US$65-billion in its new transition businesses – including EV charging, biofuels, hydrogen, wind and solar – between 2023 and 2030, when they will account for half the company’s annual capital expenditure.
“We believe that you must invest in today’s energy system,” he said. “On the other hand, we believe the world needs to transition ... that creates opportunity for our company.”
Over the past three-and-a-half years, BP has also undergone big internal changes, with the changing of its top leadership, the departure of thousands of oil veterans and the hiring of thousands from the renewable world, including senior leaders.
Mr. Looney dismissed criticism levelled by investors and analysts that the company is moving too fast and spending too much on low-carbon fuels and renewables whose returns pale in comparison with oil and gas today.
“We will grow in sectors that will not be correlated to the oil price. That will be very, very valuable,” he said.
“We can sit here today and say, is oil going to grow at 1 per cent per year, 1.5 per cent, or half a per cent? We can debate that natural gas is going to grow at 2 per cent.”
“If I look at sustainable aviation fuel, if I look at biofuels, if I look at biogas, if I look at EV charging, these are sectors which are growing at double-digit rates.”
The International Energy Agency expects demand for biofuels, today a small market, to more than double between 2022 and 2030 as governments tighten climate regulation.
BP plans to spend US$15-billion by 2030 to sharply grow its biofuel and biogas businesses to 170,000 barrels a day (b/d), compared with oil and gas output of two million b/d. It expects returns from biofuels to reach at least 15 per cent, similar to those from oil and gas currently.
Renewables and low-carbon still account for a small portion of the group’s revenue.
In the first half of 2023, the so-called “transition growth engines” accounted for US$700-million of a total US$23-billion in core BP earnings.
Mr. Looney expects the transition businesses’ earnings to grow to US$3-billion to US$4-billion by 2025, and as much as US$12-billion by 2030, roughly one quarter of total core earnings.
“Transition does not equal low returns,” he said.
Mr. Looney, who joined BP at the age of 21 as an engineer in the Scottish oil capital Aberdeen, said the company is “my life, in many ways,” but that he does not feel resentful over criticism.
“One thing we’ve learned after three years is we will never satisfy everybody,” Mr. Looney said. “It’s impossible.”