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Big Oil’s Green Retreat Marks First Investment Decline Since 2017
Posted on 3/18/26 at 8:41 am
Posted on 3/18/26 at 8:41 am
quote:
The world’s top oil and gas companies slashed investments in green energy in 2025 from a year earlier, for the first decline in their spending on low-carbon energy solutions since 2017, a new report by BloombergNEF showed on Wednesday.
Last year, the largest oil and gas firms slashed investments in green energy by more than one-third: to $25.7 billion, down from $38.2 billion in 2024, the report found.
The supermajors are now prioritizing their core oil and gas operations which are more profitable than renewables, while regulatory backlash against projects such as offshore wind in the United States have also dampened Big Oil’s enthusiasm.
After spending the early 2020s promising a gradual reduction in fossil fuel production and billions of U.S. dollars in low-carbon energy investments, Europe’s biggest oil and gas firms have dramatically changed their priorities as the energy transition proved much slower than anticipated and the 2022 energy crisis exposed shortfalls in conventional energy supply.
European majors BP and Shell reversed their pledges from the early 2020s to reduce oil and gas production by the end of the decade. Last year marked the return to boosting oil and gas investment and production, and with it—increased exploration efforts in key basins and promising new frontiers.
The European majors scaled back billions of dollars of investment in renewables and are now looking to bolster their oil and gas reserves portfolios. BP and Shell realized that the energy transition faces bigger hurdles than expected and doesn’t pay off in profit margins and shareholder payouts the way oil and gas does.
Shell’s chief executive Wael Sawan has said that reducing global oil and gas production would be “dangerous and irresponsible”.
The U.S. supermajors, ExxonMobil and Chevron, did not have to pivot back to oil and gas – they weren’t going in the renewable energy direction anyway. Both companies have been boosting oil and gas exploration and production and seek to add advantaged resources to their portfolios to increase reserves.
LINK
Posted on 3/18/26 at 8:54 am to ragincajun03
They got tired of throwing out good money for negative ROI
Posted on 3/18/26 at 12:03 pm to ragincajun03
Making money off nothing but people's fee-fees seems to have run it's course
Posted on 3/18/26 at 1:17 pm to AllDayEveryDay
I think that most of this was driven by government pressure in Europe.
Surprised at how big they jumped in on it considering there was no chance of making money on it.
Surprised at how big they jumped in on it considering there was no chance of making money on it.
Posted on 3/18/26 at 1:20 pm to FOBW
Great. Now we’ll be more dependent on oil than ever before.
Posted on 3/18/26 at 3:22 pm to Cycledude
as a shareholder I applaud this. Invest in what makes a good ROI
Posted on 3/18/26 at 3:29 pm to ragincajun03
They all knew it was a greenhouse scam, just invested in it to appease politicians. Nothing more.
Was a house of cards to begin with. Never financially self-supporting. Solar-like. If it ever had to stand alone or without government tax breaks and subsidies., it dies very quickly.
Was a house of cards to begin with. Never financially self-supporting. Solar-like. If it ever had to stand alone or without government tax breaks and subsidies., it dies very quickly.
Posted on 3/18/26 at 4:26 pm to ragincajun03
When I was at NextEra years ago, they publicly promoted all the green development they did, but also invested in oil and gas quietly because the returns were so much better than the renewable projects even with the subsidies.
Posted on 3/18/26 at 4:29 pm to idlewatcher
BP had ventured into the green energy side of the business at least three times since 2000. Each time, they have backed away and returned to the dark side of oil.
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