Fossil gas
Fossil gas is the new coal. Although often labelled ‘natural,’ fossil gas is a major driver of the climate crisis. There is no more room for new investments in fossil gas projects if we are to avert the worst impacts of the climate crisis and set a path towards decarbonisation.
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Key facts
- Methane is a greenhouse gas 86 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20 years period.
- Even after the 2015 Paris Agreement financial institutions have been pumping billions into fossil gas projects.
- The European Investment Bank committed to stop financing fossil fuels, gas included, from the end of 2021. It remains the exception among international financial institutions.
- In 2018-2020, gas made up over 75% of multilateral development banks’ known fossil fuels investments.
- In May 2021 the International Energy Agency warned there is no more room for new investments in fossil gas if the world is to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees.
Key issues
- Fossil gas is a potent greenhouse gas emitted throughout the supply chain, not only when burnt for energy production. Major international bodies warn fossil gas must be curtailed to slow the climate crisis.
- The fossil gas industry is plagued with corruption, and gas imports create reliance on authoritarian regimes.
- Despite the myriad problems with this fossil fuel, international financial institutions keep pouring billions in public money into gas projects and companies.
Background
Fossil gas is part of the problem, not the solution
Even though scientific evidence shows fossil gas is a significant driver of global warming, countries and financial institutions still consider fossil gas as a part of the solution in addressing climate change as a so-called bridge fuel.
In 2018 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) pleaded for a quick reduction of emissions globally and a rapid switch to carbon-free energy systems to to prevent the planet from warming by more than 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels.
Fossil gas releases dangerous levels of greenhouse gas emissions – not just due to the CO2 emissions during combustion but also because of the methane emissions that occur in the supply chain, from extraction to distribution. These emissions are heavily unreported and have yet to be addressed by regulators and industry.
Methane is a greenhouse gas that is, in the short period of twenty years, 86 times more potent than carbon dioxide and has already driven more than a quarter of global warming to date.
If we are to slow climate change, methane is the strongest lever and reining its emissions would complement necessary measures to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
A May 2021 report from the International Energy Agency report rightfully dismissed the idea of fossil gas as a transition fuel. It concluded that new investments in fossil fuels extraction must end and a radical reduction in fossil fuels, including gas, is needed over the next decade if we are to reach the Paris Agreement’s aim of limiting global warming to below 1.5°C.
Investing now in fossil gas would be the nail in the coffin of climate change. Such investments would delay the inevitable energy transformation, making it even costlier and more cumbersome in the next decades. Other solutions that are both economically and technologically feasible already exist and can be implemented.
LATEST PUBLICATION
Billions of EU recovery money to support fossil fuels
This briefing analyses plans for gas investments in the recovery plans of eight central and eastern European countries (Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Romania and Slovakia). It reveals that most contain gas investments, such as gas boilers (the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland); a gas pipeline (Bulgaria); gas-based district heating (the Czech Republic); gas-based transport (the Czech Republic); and the possible development of fossil fuel-based hydrogen (Bulgaria, Poland and Romania). Such proposals in favour of expanding the role of gas in the EU do not comply with the objectives of the European Green Deal, nor with the International Energy Agency’s recent call for the immediate end to financing fossil fuel projects, and the EU should not use recovery funds to finance these measures.
Fossil gas is a dirty business
The issues with fossil gas are not limited to its wrecking effects on climate change.
The fossil gas industry’s business model, through its practices, suggest that the continued profitability of these companies is achieved in significant part through bribery and other corruption. These same companies often play a central role in planning, assessing and projecting regions’ future energy needs in a way that primarily serves their own interests. Continued interference by oil and gas companies has also weakened institutions and policies put in place to mitigate climate change.
The remaining gas reserves are mostly concentrated in the Persian Gulf, Central Asia and Russia. This means that gas importing countries, including the EU which is heavily reliant on gas imports, are dependent on undemocratic and politically unstable regimes, with a proven track record of human right abuses.
Some of the areas where sizable fossil gas investments are planned, such as southeastern Europe and Central Asia, are among those most vulnerable to climate change. If these countries are planning to address and adapt to climate change, those fossil gas projects will become stranded assets in the next decades, well before the end of their financial life, thus leaving those countries once again far behind and increasing the costs of their inevitable transformation of energy systems.
Financial institutions pour billions into fossil gas
Financial institutions are struggling to kick the fossil fuel habit. Since the 2015 Paris Agreement, the public financial institutions have been supporting fossil fuels companies with billions of euros.
The European Investment Bank (EIB) was the first multilateral development bank that recognized it was time to stop financing gas. Following a strong campaign by an international coalition of NGOs, the EIB agreed on a new energy lending policy that stops financing fossil fuel projects from the end of 2021. But other multilateral development banks (MDBs) still need to follow suit.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has clear mission statements on supporting the transition towards clean energy. Yet, several Bankwatch reports showed that the Bank’s financial support for fossil fuels remained steady throughout 2010-2019, the warmest decade on record.
In the early 2000s the EBRD was considering investing in the USD 20 billion Sakhalin-2 oil and gas development in the pristine area of Sakhalin Island, Russia. But eventually, in 2007 the Bank decided not to engage, in part due to the protest campaign of local indigenous communities and international NGOs that contended the project would have adverse impacts on Sakhalin’s people and environment.
European MDBs’ latest fossil fuels adventure was the Southern Gas Corridor, a system of mega-pipelines to bring fossil gas from Azerbaijan to Europe. This massive project has simultaneously been boosting Azerbaijan’s dictatorial regime and causing upheaval in local communities along the pipelines’ routes in Turkey, Greece, Albania and Italy.
The pipeline project received unprecedented financial support from both the EBRD and the EIB. In addition to earlier EBRD investments in the Southern Gas Corridor, in the period 2014-2018 the EBRD extended over USD 450 million to the Azerbaijan gas field (Shah Deniz II) and more than USD 1 billion into the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) and the Trans Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP).
New investments into fossil gas will lock economies into the current system of fossil fuels dependency and will have a detrimental effect on the much-needed transformation of energy systems.
Latest news
Gas pipelines run over EU energy policy
Bankwatch in the media | 14 September, 2016Critics claim €3bn European funding for the Southern Gas Corridor energy project would undermine EU climate change targets and gloss over human rights abuses. LONDON, 14 September, 2016 – Civil society campaigners have accused the European Union of pouring unprecedented amounts of state aid into a huge energy project that runs counter to its own climate change objectives.
Read moreAlbanians Dispute New Pipeline Compensation Rates
Bankwatch in the media | 13 September, 2016NGOs warn that Albanian families expected to give up their properties to make room for the Adriatic pipeline project, TAP, have not been adequately compensated, while some have faced threats of government expropriation. Four families in Albania have submitted complaints to the European Investment Bank, EIB, over the low level of compensation they have been offered from TAP representatives for the displacement of their properties as a result of building the pipeline.
Read moreTAP in Albania
Bankwatch in the media | 26 August, 2016Organizata joqeveritare Bank Watch Network po kryen nje vizite dhe inspektim ne vendin tone per te pare nga afer zbatimin e projekteve madhore me impakt ne ekonomi. Sipas perfaqesuesve te kesaj organizate eshte mjaft e rendesishme qe gjate implementimit ne terren te projekteve madhore dhe afatgjata te merren parasysh interesat e banoreve dhe qytetareve per tu ofruar atyre zgjidhje te qendrueshme.
Read moreRelated publications
Greece – North Macedonia gas interconnector update
Briefing | 19 November, 2024 | Download PDFThis briefing takes an updated look at the Greece – North Macedonia gas interconnector project and concludes that the arguments in favour of the project are still not supported by convincing evidence and that the claimed benefits are highly unlikely to materialise.
Looking beyond the hype: Public funding of hydrogen in central and eastern Europe
Report | 31 October, 2024 | Download PDFThis briefing analyses over-optimism about hydrogen’s role in the central and eastern European Member States – Hungary, Poland and Romania.
Hooked on gas: Report on the status of national energy and climate plans in central and eastern Europe
Report | 20 June, 2024 | Download PDFThis publication highlights the need for gas phase-out pathways and identifies shortcomings in the current draft NECPs of eight central and eastern European Member States.