Does Big Oil Have To Be Evil To Survive?

It’s a tough business, and someone has to do it. Don’t they?

 

It’s one thing to pledge to do no evil if your business is an Internet search engine born on the pristine Stanford campus, or selling organic tea to Angelenos. It’s another if your business model is predicated on drilling into the earth to extract fossil fuels needed to keep humanity on the move, and if the drilling has to be done in some of the most pristine ecosystems on the planet, or in some of its most corrupt political jurisdictions. The oil business is messy, dangerous and brawny, requiring massive capital investments and technological prowess to extract fuel from the planet. It’s never been an industry for the mild-mannered. Still, in advance of Steve Coll’s “Does ExxonMobil Rule the World?“, a Zócalo event, we ask a number of experts whether Big Oil needs to be evil to survive.

They sure thrive on being evil

Steve Coll’s remarkable book makes clear that Big Oil is actively conspiring against the planet. The news that Exxon is monitoring the development of renewable energy to make sure these efforts don’t get off the ground is as chilling as all the news about its actions in Africa. If you think about it, the fossil fuel industry is engaged on what is really the most radical act in human history: Exxon Mobil and its competitors are altering the chemical composition of the atmosphere. Now, all of us who use their products are in some ways implicated–but it is the big oil companies who use their profits to warp our democracy and make sure that change never happens. They have a lot to answer for.

Bill McKibben is the author of a dozen books about the environment, beginning with The End of Nature in 1989, which is regarded as the first book for a general audience on climate change.

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No, but drop the cardinal sin of pride

I have never thought Big Oil was “evil.” To be evil one has to have a soul to corrupt. Big Oil is in the business of making money for shareholders, and that is not evil. In many instances, actions of Big Oil may be illegal (as in bribery in foreign countries) or may appear immoral (failure to control toxic air pollution at refineries), but most of their actions are not “evil” as we understand the term.

That doesn’t mean that Big Oil isn’t guilty of something: the cardinal sin of pride. As the largest of all multinational corporate businesses, engaged in a very complex endeavor, and making loads of money, Big Oil does believe it is “the smartest guy in the room.” Sadly for all of us, that means the industry fails to listen to the public and is making many mistakes that will hamper it in the future. To talk with oil company executives is to move into a different world–a world where they feel persecuted, according to them, primarily for political gain or because the public just doesn’t “get” the important job they do.

But it is not our job to get them. It is the public’s right to either purchase or not purchase their product and to ask for reasonable regulation of pollution and climate change. It then becomes the job of Big Oil to either provide that product as the public wishes, or to get out of the business. It also has the right in a free democracy to try and influence public opinion (as long as it doesn’t commit fraud, as committed in trying to influence opinion on climate change).

Having the wealth, human capital, and connections that it has, Big Oil could be determining and creating tomorrow’s cleaner energy sources, but it may let its pride in its own rightness get in the way. And that is what goeth before the fall.

Victor B. Flatt is the Tom & Elizabeth Taft Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law and the Director of the Center for Law, Environment, Adaptation and Resources (CLEAR) at the University of North Carolina School of Law. He is also a Distinguished Scholar at the University of Houston’s Global Energy Management Institute, and a member scholar of the Center for Progressive Reform.

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How about a little crude transparency?

Big oil companies hold astonishing amounts of wealth and power–they are among the world’s richest companies–but this is partly because they have to be large to manage the financial risks, and engineering feats, that are necessary in the business. Only very large, deep-pocketed companies can risk tens of billions to search for oil miles beneath the ocean floor. There’s a reason that we have artisanal bakeries but not artisanal oil companies.

On top of that, these gargantuan firms must also work in some of the world’s poorest countries. When powerful companies want to do business with weak governments and impoverished communities, the stage has been set for corruption, exploitation, and not incidentally, remarkable profits. So there is a certain predisposition towards evil.

Still, there’s no reason why oil companies have to be quite as evil as they often are. Many of them are complicit in the corruption that helps cause the “oil curse”–enabling political leaders in oil-exporting countries to steal the revenues that should be going to help citizens. Right now, for example, the American Petroleum Institute (the lobbying arm of the oil industry) has threatened to sue the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) if it issues rules to implement a provision from the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which would force companies to disclose payments made to governments around the world. If they really support transparency and oppose corruption–which they claim to–oil companies should support these reforms, not obstruct them.

Michael L. Ross is a political science professor at UCLA.

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No, but it should be more risk-averse for its own good

No, Big Oil does not have to be evil to survive. And it is important to remember that in drilling and exploring aggressively, Big Oil answers a societal demand. Accidents from oil production–environmental in particular–are inevitable unless individual consumption habits change and the country broadens its energy portfolio to become less dependent on oil. Don’t shoot the messenger, or the driller who drills on our behalf.

That said, Big Oil can be a better partner and do a lot more to drill responsibly while still turning a tidy profit. The oil industry has identified hundreds of best practices for drilling that are inconsistently applied and usually not required by law. They range from well construction methods that could have prevented BP’s Macondo blowout to capturing waste so it isn’t dumped overboard or onto the ground.

Unfortunately history has taught us that without regulations to institutionalize such practices, most oil companies choose time and time again not to adopt them and to push aside their own best judgment in order to cut costs and maximize profits.

Why companies keep choosing not to do what their own engineers or managers know is best for business and the environment is a mystery. BP’s executives–over the two decades before 2010’s Gulf spill–repeatedly took huge gambles that put their workers’ lives and the environment at risk, sometimes to save a few thousand dollars. The company’s executives bemoaned their own lack of prudence and swore they would change, but then struggled to do so. Exxon and Shell and most other oil companies have faced similar challenges over the years.

The solution, according to some government officials, is to force an improvement in behavior and stop leaving it to choice that is too easily corrupted by the prospect of extra profits. Research shows that despite protests to the contrary, wisely and judiciously applied regulations can provide a level and predictable operating environment and help companies make more money. Forcing oil companies, for example, to capture and sell the climate-damaging methane produced from their wells, instead of venting or burning it, can pay for itself within two years, then lead to hundreds of millions in profits.

And its hard to imagine that if BP had been willing to slow down its drilling of the Macondo well–perhaps at a cost of $5 million–that the company wouldn’t be $30 billion richer right now as a result.

Abrahm Lustgarten is a reporter on energy and the environment for ProPublica, a former writer for Fortune, and the author of Run To Failure: BP and the Making of the Deepwater Horizon Disaster.

*Photo courtesy of jimbrickett.