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Earth Power

BP Slashes Its Oil Exploration Team by 85%, Starts Switching to Renewables (yahoo.com) 128

Reuters reports on big changes at BP (the company formerly known as British Petroleum): Its geologists, engineers and scientists have been cut to less than 100 from a peak of more than 700 a few years ago, company sources told Reuters, part of a climate change-driven overhaul triggered last year by CEO Bernard Looney. "The winds have turned very chilly in the exploration team since Looney's arrival. This is happening incredibly fast," a senior member of the team told Reuters.

Hundreds have left the oil exploration team in recent months, either transferred to help develop new low-carbon activities or laid off, current and former employees said. The exodus is the starkest sign yet from inside the company of its rapid shift away from oil and gas, which will nevertheless be its main source of cash to finance a switch to renewables for at least the next decade. BP declined to comment on the staffing changes, which have not been publicly disclosed... Looney made his intentions clear internally and externally by lowering BP's production targets and becoming the first oil major CEO to promote this as a positive to investors seeking a long-term vision for a lower-carbon economy.

BP is cutting some 10,000 jobs, around 15% of its workforce, under Looney's restructuring, the most aggressive among Europe's oil giants including Royal Dutch Shell and Total. The 50-year-old, a veteran oil engineer who previously headed the oil and gas exploration and production division, aims to cut output by 1 million barrels per day, or 40%, over the next decade while growing renewable energy output 20 fold.

Elsewhere Reuters reports that due to the pandemic, acquisitions of new onshore and offshore exploration licences for the top five Western energy companies "dropped to the lowest in at least five years," citing data from Oslo-based consultancy Rystad Energy.
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BP Slashes Its Oil Exploration Team by 85%, Starts Switching to Renewables

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  • by dwywit ( 1109409 ) on Monday January 25, 2021 @03:48AM (#60988292)

    And manufacturing. I have BPSolar PV panels on my roof, warranted for 80% of output for 25 years. Quality gear.

    • I doubt they will. BP fundamentally still exists to make money and BP sold its solar business back in the mid 2000s because it was too low margin, and that was before China massively ramped up production and dropped the bottom out of the solar industry.

      From what I can see their investment at least as announced thus far is focused on Wind, Hydrogen, biofuel and CCS (the left overs of which they intend to dump into their wells).

    • Try REC Twinpeak panels. They are split into two logical panels internally so they can be half-shaded and still function, they are readily available for around $0.50/W or less, and they have a 10 year product warranty and 25 year linear power output warranty. The least of them are about 17% efficient, the ones I just bought are 19%...

  • Wait, they can do this? They can stop pumping oil and still make money? I though they have to fight progress until last black drop or go bankrupt. Look like it was just typical corporate greed and laziness after all. Then again, it's not really that surprising, is it?

    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday January 25, 2021 @03:53AM (#60988314)

      I'm sure this is about "typical corporate greed", as it would be with most companies - they've decided that investing in renewables is the best path towards continued future profits.

      • I'm sure this is about "typical corporate greed", as it would be with most companies - they've decided that investing in renewables is the best path towards continued future profits.

        It's definitely a long term vision. Corporate greed would favour burning as much oil as possible for the foreseeable future. The margin differences between renewables and the oil industry is incredible. I think they may just be seeing the writing on the wall and putting themselves in a position of long term survival over short term profits. I wonder how the likes of Exxon who haven't announced much in the way of significant alternate energy will fare in the future. Short time suspect Exxon will dominate and

        • Corporate greed would favour burning as much oil as possible for the foreseeable future.

          The burning of the oil isn't something BP can control. They control the supply. They see renewables creating a future supply glut which will push prices way down. That's why they're cutting their future production. It's fundamentally no different from OPEC production cuts, except they're not a cartel so they can't force their competitors to cooperate, they can only signal and hope and hedge their bets with other energy s

          • The burning of the oil isn't something BP can control. They control the supply.

            Supply and demand follows a price curve. What is perfectly clear is that the oil companies *do* control demand. The reality is oil remains in high demand and corporate greed would favour continuing to match this demand (like basically every oil company is doing) rather than start spending money on low margin green projects.

            • Present demand is high. Present demand is not what an intelligent company makes oil exploration decisions based on, considering those explorations won't pay off until a decade or two down the road. BP is making these decisions based on the demand they expect in 2030s. They expect that a combination of battery tech progress and government regulations will reduce consumer demand for oil significantly in the 2030s, so there's no sense investing lots of money in building up new sources of oil production for tha

              • Indeed that is my point. BP is taking a long term gamble on a major world change while the rest of the oil industry is very much looking 5-10 years past that as a likely time for any significant upset. Corporate greed favours continuing exploration, especially since the long term trend is that we will need to keep burning oil as a species and especially for companies that are looking in places other than deep water or the arctic for exploration.

                Oil isn't an on and off thing, and neither are upstream project

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Which is itself a quite significant moment, when oil companies give up the fight and pivot. Hopefully we will see less misinformation and shilling now, less bogus paid research and the like.

        And hopefully the market will remain open to a number of new competitors so that competition keeps prices down. Unlike oil they can't control the supply of electrons.

    • They can stop pumping oil and still make money?

      BP will still pump oil. They are just cutting way back on exploration for new oil reserves. This is a trend across the entire oil industry.

      I though they have to fight progress until last black drop or go bankrupt.

      BP has been investing in renewables for decades. Your snarky cynicism is misplaced.

      Look like it was just typical corporate greed and laziness after all.

      "Greed" means economically effective use of capital.

      "Laziness" means economically effective use of labor.

      "Greed" and "laziness" are the foundation of our prosperity.

      If you would rather live in a country where people work hard but produce little, there are many to choose from.

      • They can stop pumping oil and still make money?

        BP will still pump oil. They are just cutting way back on exploration for new oil reserves. This is a trend across the entire oil industry.

        Cutting its exploration team by 85 percent is a normal trend int he oil industry?

        A bit of digging reveals this:

        BP will cut its oil and gas output by 40 percent by 2030 and increase its low-carbon investment tenfold by then, the company announced Tuesday as it begins to detail its 2050 net-zero strategy ... BP is now targeting 50 gigawatts of renewables capacity by 2030, an ambition that puts it on a level with French utility giant EDF. BP's renewables target includes a 20-gigawatt goal by 2025, up from th

        • This! Partially anyway. BP sits on huge reserves, and the entire industry is not abandoning exploration (BP is somewhat unique in this regard).

          That said there's no secret that Looney idolises the likes of Musk. He see's BP as a funding source to becoming the Tesla of the energy industry. Use oil money to pay to develop an alternate energy company including technology and knowhow, buying the knowledge where you need to so when the time comes and oil is on the way out they effectively are the experts of the n

    • Wait, they can do this? They can stop pumping oil and still make money? I though they have to fight progress until last black drop or go bankrupt. Look like it was just typical corporate greed and laziness after all. Then again, it's not really that surprising, is it?

      Microsoft has realized that it cannot sustain profitability and growth with Windows licenses alone, so it built up Azure, happily sells linux services, and is putting good effort into XBox and other diverse markets. To me, BP is doing the same. It wants to be relevant 20-30 years down the road and petrochemicals and green energy are great ways to do so.

      Wall Street was really beating them up about this a year ago. I watched it unfold daily because I am a shareholder. The pandemic reduced demand + ris

  • BP had a big oil spill in 2010. It apparently cost them $65bn to clean up and it seems over $20bn in fines. So I am guessing that oil drilling companies are also in oil shipping, which is risky.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    With further bans on gasoline powered cars and the huge opportunities in renewables, though it might seem mad to people who like investing in petroleum I'd say it sounds like a smart bet on the next 50 years. We still need plastic though.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Monday January 25, 2021 @09:02AM (#60988856) Journal

    The stone age did not end because we ran out of stone

    This was much bandied about during all the Peak Oil debates. Claims that we will leave half of all known reserves of oil in the ground without ever pumping it stretched our credulity.

    People who were saying "Once there was the imminent loss of whale oil. Then there was the charcoal/wood shortage. People have been predicting peak oil since 1970. They will find something" sounded too flippant and irresponsible.

    Looks like "they" turned out to be electrochemists, material scientists, low speed aerodynamics and civil engg. And the something turned out to be batteries, wind mills and solar arrays.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Monday January 25, 2021 @10:41AM (#60989202)

      Not so much of a stretch for people who realize you can't just pump most of those remaining reserves. Tar sands oil requires about $60 a barrel to break even, so it would have been (with modern technology) profitable during the 1979-85 oil crisis, and was from about 2004-2015. Deep water production is just as bad or worse. US fracking is somewhere between $30-$50 a barrel, which sounds okay, but that's for the easiest stuff.

      We used to joke that OPEC was motivated to keep the price of oil below $50 a barrel because otherwise people would go off and invent alternatives. Looks like the latter part of that was true.

      • It is not just the cost of production that counts. Saudi Arabia still has fields producing oil below 10$/barrel. And many parts of Iran and the Emirates have sub 20$ fields. But, these countries have run up so much deficit. They are subsidizing almost everything for their citizens to reduce dissent and hold on to power. The economy of these countries will collapse if oil falls below certain level.

        So it is possible for Saudi Arabia to pull all stops, and sell oil at 50$ a barrel for sustained periods to ba

        • Saudi Arabia claims to have a lot of cheap oil-- but then way have they been exploring and working on off shore oil? They must be concerned about their cheap oil production... and how much left they may actually have... some of their power comes from their estimated supply so there is a massive incentive to exaggerate it's size.

  • > cut to less than 100 from a peak of more than 700 a few years ago

    Only 100 left to go. I hope BP was thoughtful enough to give fair notice, training, and placement services, no doubt costing a tiny fraction of their executives' pay.

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