Responding to the news that Royal Dutch Shell will slash $22
billion from the value of its assets due to the COVID-19 pandemic
and falling oil prices, Michael Bradshaw, Professor of Global
Energy at Warwick Business School, said:
"How individuals, governments, and businesses respond to the
COVID-19 crisis in the months ahead will have long-term
implications for the environment and the future of oil-producing
companies and countries.
"After the financial crash in 2008 there was a rapid rebound in
the use of fossil fuels. Within two years we returned to the same
path of growing carbon emissions we would have been on if the
crisis never happened.
"World leaders face a similar decision this time. They could aim
for another quick and dirty recovery, increasing fossil fuel
consumption to get the economy back on track, or they can double
down on the promises of clean, green growth outlined in the Paris
agreement and treat the recovery as an opportunity to decarbonise
their economies.
"Environmental groups are already lobbying to prevent the Paris
agreements becoming another casualty of the pandemic, stressing
the need for a Green New Deal. If they are successful, demand for
oil might never return to the peak we saw prior to COVID-19.
"For example, there is no guarantee the transport sector will
fully recover. After the pandemic, we might have a different
attitude to international air travel or physically going into
work.
"This will create huge challenge for oil producers, especially if
demand and prices fail to recover sufficiently to support a
managed transition to a more sustainable future."