Coronavirus crisis could cause $25tn fossil fuel industry collapse
The coronavirus outbreak could trigger a $25tn
(£20tn) collapse in the fossil fuel industry by accelerating a terminal decline
for the world’s most polluting companies.
A study has found that the value of the world’s
fossil fuel reserves could fall by two-thirds, sooner than the industry
expects, because the Covid-19 crisis has hastened the peak for oil, gas and
coal demand.
The looming fossil fuel collapse could pose “a
significant threat to global financial stability” by wiping out the market
value of fossil fuel companies, according to financial thinktank Carbon
Tracker.
The report predicts a 2% decline in demand for
fossil fuels every year could cause the future profits of oil, gas and coal
companies to collapse from an estimated $39tn to just $14tn.
It warns that a blow to fossil fuel companies could
send shockwaves through the global economy because their market value makes up
a quarter of the world’s equity markets and they owe trillions of dollars to
the world’s banks.
Kingsmill Bond, the author of the report, said: “Now
is the time to plan an orderly wind-down of fossil fuel assets and manage the
impact on the global economy rather than try to sustain the unsustainable.”
The report says the world is “witnessing the decline
and fall of the fossil fuel system” owing to the quicker-than-expected growth
of clean energy alternatives coupled with the collapse in demand for fossil
fuels amid the pandemic.
It follows findings from the International Energy
Agency, which forecast the Covid-19 fallout would lead to the most severe
plunge in energy demand since the second world war and trigger multidecade lows
for the world’s consumption of oil, gas and coal, while renewable energy continued
to grow.
The world’s demand for fossil fuels has plunged by
almost 10% amid the coronavirus lockdown, and many energy economists believe it
may fail to recover from the crisis.
Bond said fossil fuel companies and their investors
had failed to realise the current decline of the fossil fuel industry may prove
terminal.
“The bizarre
thing is that the fossil fuel incumbents have been so resistant to the idea of
change for so long, and put out so much bogus PR, that they risk falling victim
to their own rhetoric,” he said.
“There is far more risk inherent in the fossil fuel
system than is conventionally priced into financial markets. Investors need to
increase discount rates, reduce expected prices, curtail terminal values and
account for the clean-up costs.”




