Economy

Woodside’s US green energy projects paused as Trump returns as President

“As can be the case with these technology investments, we’ve determined the technology is not going to be as cost-competitive as we had anticipated,” O’Neill said. “That’s why we’ve parked that opportunity.”

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Woodside’s retreat from the two US projects continues a global trend of giant oil and gas companies slowing the speed and scale of their forays into renewable energy and alternative fuels.

In Australia and around the world, large resources companies have faced pressure from institutional investors paying closer attention to environmental, social and governance factors (known collectively as ESG issues), which have been pushing big emitters to reduce their carbon footprints and do more to diversify into industries that don’t release harmful greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

But the oil and gas industry’s climate commitments have been slowing – and sometimes stalling – since 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine choked energy supplies, unleashed a global scramble for spare fossil fuels and boosted commodity prices to near-record highs.

While the pullback began well before the US elections, “Trump 2.0 will only accelerate the pivot”, MST Marquee energy analyst Saul Kavonic said.

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“Peak ESG has passed, and every oil and gas company is walking back from their uneconomic green opportunity pipeline,” he said.

The pendulum had “swung too far in the first place”, Kavonic said, to the point that some companies had been pursuing “uneconomic and at times impossible” targets.

“There is little appetite for loss-leading, strategic or marginal green investments any more,” he said.

The news comes as ASX-listed Woodside, whose operations span Western Australia, eastern Australia, Africa and the Americas, posted its strongest-ever yearly oil and gas production figures during the 12 months to December 31. The result was boosted by the ramp-up of its Sangomar oil field in Senegal, the company said

Woodside has embarked on plans to expand in the US after buying an under-construction liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal in Louisiana last year. O’Neill said the company welcomed the Trump administration’s “recognition that energy is at the heart of a vibrant economy”.

Hours after his inauguration, Trump initiated plans to enable the fast-tracking of permits for fossil fuel projects, expanding oil and gas drilling, particularly in Alaska, and lifting the former administration’s restrictions on LNG exports.

Artem Abramov, the head of new energies research at global consultancy Rystad, said Trump’s policy direction of accelerating domestic oil and gas supply would have major implications for renewable energy and clean technology sectors.

He said the impact of the US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement was expected to be more significant than during his previous term as president, and might be felt across the globe.

“It could further strengthen support for anti-climate policies in Europe and other regions,” he said.

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