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Analysis

Coincidence of Coronavirus, Climate Crises Accelerates Major Shifts in Oil and Gas Industries

Regardless of what shape the post-pandemic recovery takes, the crisis may have a far-reaching impact on future demand for fossil fuels.

Kate Dourian

2 min read

An idle oil pumping unit is silhouetted against the setting sun in a field south of Oakley, Kansas, May 20. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
An idle oil pumping unit is silhouetted against the setting sun in a field south of Oakley, Kansas, May 20. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Executive Summary

The coronavirus pandemic sparked the sharpest energy demand drop in history in early 2020 as a global health crisis tipped the world economy into recession. Billions of people were ordered into full or partial lockdowns by their governments in a bid to control the spread of the virus. Supply chains were disrupted, and offices, factories, and businesses were forced to shut down, leading to massive job losses. Trillions of dollars in fiscal stimulus packages have been pledged by countries, many of which are presented as “green recovery” plans that tighten environmental policies. The European Union has pledged to become a net-zero zone by 2050, while China has set a 2060 target to attain carbon neutrality. International oil companies are in the process of reinventing themselves as clean energy champions with BP, Eni, Total, Shell, and many of their peers announcing plans to decarbonize their businesses.

Regardless of when the global economy returns to growth and what shape the post-pandemic recovery takes, the crisis has exacerbated existing weaknesses in the energy system and may have a far-reaching impact on future demand for fossil fuels as a result of structural changes driven by the climate change agenda. The percentage share of fossil fuels in final energy consumption has been in decline for nearly two decades due to fuel switching, particularly in the electricity sector, where renewable energy has been growing rapidly as costs have declined. All this has led to predictions that oil demand is on the verge of peaking or may already have peaked in 2019, according to the latest BP Energy Outlook.

All these developments will have extensive implications for the oil-producing Gulf Arab states, where revenue from oil and gas exports remain the single largest source of income. Economic diversification is still at an early stage and the Gulf states face the challenge of preserving their role as energy suppliers to a new market system that is more competitive and diverse. The way forward is to decarbonize their oil and gas assets by using existing technologies that can strip harmful carbon and methane emissions and export cleaner products that are acceptable to a more environmentally conscious consumer base. Yet this does not preclude the need to further diversify their economies sooner rather than later as the writing is already on the wall.

Read full paper

About Petro Diplomacy

This paper is the scene setter for the 2020 Petro Diplomacy conference. For the sixth consecutive year, AGSIW convenes its Petro Diplomacy conference, this year virtually, bringing together private and public sector stakeholders from the United States and the Gulf Arab countries to discuss emerging trends in energy markets and regional politics.

The views represented herein are the author's or speaker's own and do not necessarily reflect the views of AGSI, its staff, or its board of directors.

Kate Dourian

Non-Resident Fellow, AGSI; Contributing Editor, MEES; Fellow, Energy Institute

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A man in traditional Emirati clothes attends the first day of the United Nations Climate Conference, COP28, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 30, 2023. (REUTERS/Amr Alfiky)
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Hydrogen powered mobile unite is seen during Saudi Aramco's media trip to demonstrate Hydrogen automotive technology at Techno Valley Science Park in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, June 27, 2021. (REUTERS/Hajer Abdulmohsin)

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