Russia Faces $2T in Stranded Hydrocarbon Assets in Net Zero World

Researchers say more than half of Russia’s oil and gas infrastructure could be worthless within the next 15 years.
Russia could be left with almost $2 trillion in worthless hydrocarbon assets if major economies hit their net zero targets over the coming decades, new research into the cost of the energy transition has found.
“The low-carbon transition could lead to a period of global financial and political instability due to the combination of deep structural change, widespread financial loss and reorganization in financial and market power worldwide,” a group of researchers from British universities said in a landmark paper, published Thursday in the journal Nature.
Their calculations show more than half of Russia’s estimated $3.9 trillion stock of fossil fuel assets — such as oil and gas rigs, pipelines, extraction facilities and other infrastructure to support the country’s vital energy sector — would become “stranded,” or effectively worth nothing, by 2036.
It is the latest stark warning of the potential cost of the global transition to cleaner sources of fuel for Russia. But despite the significant losses faced by the industry, Russia’s overall economy would only be 0.8% smaller as a result of the net zero transition than in a business-as-usual scenario, the researchers found.
The paper also said the Russian government could lose around 40% of its lucrative oil and gas revenues by 2030 — proceeds which have accounted for around 40% of the total national budget in recent years. That loss would be second in scope only to Canada. Employment could also drop by almost 4% by the end of the decade as demand for Russia’s hydrocarbons falls and the industry dwindles.
Globally, energy importers such as the EU, China, India, Japan, South Korea and Africa stand to be big winners, with their economies gaining by more than 10% in some cases. But energy heavyweights such as Russia, the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Norway and Canada would be left with a combined $11-14 trillion of worthless hydrocarbon infrastructure.
The paper also highlights the importance that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), led by Saudi Arabia, will play in influencing which countries are hit hardest by the energy transition.
Since their production costs are typically cheaper than those in countries like Russia, which has a much harsher climate and trickier extraction processes, it would be in their interests to ramp up production, flood the market and squeeze out their competitors through lower prices, the authors argue.
“OPEC countries have a strong rational incentive, together or independently, to capture most future oil and gas demand by maintaining or increasing their production and thereby pricing out other participants from fossil fuel markets,” the paper states.
Under this scenario, OPEC would secure two-thirds of the global oil market, up from around 40% now.





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