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Of the businesses most hurt by the pandemic, Chevron is near the top. Oil prices plummeted earlier this year after it became clear that the world’s economy—all the commuting, trucking, and shipping that fuels it— would go into lockdown.
To make matters worse, the energy industry had been on a two-decade-long expansion of fracking. It didn’t matter that many experts had predicted that the world had reached or was near reaching “peak oil,” the point at which global oil consumption would start to drop because of a shift to more sustainable energy sources.
Interviewed on Fortune’s Leadership Next podcast, Chevron CEO Michael Wirth acknowledged the current difficulties in the oil patch. But he argued that oil would play a major role in the global economy for the foreseeable future.
“Oil is an enormous part of the energy economy today and will be for a long, long time to come,” Wirth said.
Still, Chevron, which pumps oil everywhere from Texas to Nigeria to Kazakhstan, has tried to weather the current slump by cutting thousands of jobs and by reducing planned spending by billions of dollars over the next few years. Over the past 12 months, the company has written down the value of its energy fields by nearly $16 billion, an admission that there won’t be a quick turnaround.
The complexity of Chevron’s situation, and that of its rivals, is compounded by a global reckoning over climate change. Nearly 190 countries have signed the Paris Climate Agreement, a plan to reduce carbon emissions. Meanwhile, the United Nations is pushing countries to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050. Both plans would require countries to make a dramatic shift to renewable energy and forego oil and natural gas.
Wirth said that Chevron and the rest of the energy industry can nevertheless play a big role by shifting more of its focus to green energy. He pointed to an existing Chevron project in Australia that involves taking carbon dioxide emissions and storing them underground, and another that transforms methane from dairy cow manure into natural gas.
But achieving any meaningful reduction in carbon emissions will require additional tools, and Chevron, Wirth said, is investing in several carbon-free technologies including nuclear fusion and hydrogen. Yet even if countries achieve their carbon goals, he added, fossil fuels still will be part of the energy mix.
“I think we’re going to need a lot of technologies and solutions that don’t exist today to actually take carbon out of the atmosphere to get to a net zero,” Wirth said. “Because the reality is there will still be carbon emissions in the system as we get to 2050, under any scenario.”