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Kerry challenges oil industry to prove its promised tech rescue for climate-wrecking emissions

by ELLEN KNICKMEYER
May 17, 2023

The fight — fast production cuts versus technological rescue — promises to come to a head this year.

Annual U.N.-sponsored climate talks meant to help keep countries on track to meet their pledges to cut emissions are being held this year in the United Arab Emirates.

The talks will be hosted by Sultan al-Jaber, the chief executive officer of the Emirates’ state oil company. Like the U.S. and several other countries, the Gulf nation is expanding drilling even as it champions the climate cause.

Going into November’s climate talks, al-Jaber is calling for a phase-out of ’’fossil fuel emissions,” leaving it ambiguous whether he means a ramping up of technology or is open to some production cuts.

At the 2021 U.N. climate talks in Scotland, countries for the first time agreed to phase down the global use of coal. Talks the next year in Egypt saw a major push for a commitment to phase out oil and gas, but it failed.

While nonbinding, any agreement out of this year’s climate talks that the world should start phasing out oil and gas production would be a first. It would put governments and the industry on the spot to comply.

Kerry rejected the idea of putting a deadline on phasing out oil and gas production. How fast that can happen depends partly on how fast the world moves to electric vehicles and renewable-fueled power grids, he said.

Instead, he said, this year’s climate talks will “quite possibly” produce an international agreement to phase out the use of “unabated” oil and natural gas, meaning oil and gas where the carbon emissions are not captured. This could disappoint those calling for fast cuts in oil and gas production.

Kerry said the deadline to watch is 2030. By then, the U.N.’s top climate panel says, the world will need to have nearly halved climate-damaging emissions to stave off the more devastating scenarios of global warming.

“We can’t let the wish or the hope govern common sense here,” Kerry said. “If we know that we can get the job done by deploying more renewables and current technology, we ought to be doing that.”


This story was first published on May 14, 2023. It was updated on May 17, 2023, to fix the position of clarifying note that made clear the American Petroleum Institute was declining comment on how quickly carbon capture technology would be ready and to clarify its position on supporting federal policies.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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